Four Palestinian groups claimed the attack: Jihad Islami, Popular Resistance Committees, the Popular Front and Ahmed Jibril’s PF-GC. Two Qassam missiles later landed harmlessly south of Ashkelon DEBKAfile’s military sources: The rocket, apparently of the Grad type, landed on a building site Thursday, Jan. 3, causing no casualties. It was the first weapon of the Katyusha type, used by Hizballah to pound northern Israel in 2006, to hit the northern end of the Mediterranean port and resort town, up to 18 km from Gaza.
Until now, the shorter-range Qassam missiles reached the town’s southern outskirts. The Grad rocket attack came 24 hours after Israel turned a blind eye to Cairo’s surrender to the Hamas demand to open the Rafah terminal for the unmonitored entry of hundreds of Hamas high-ups and fighters trained in Iran and Syria, carrying smuggled weapons and $150 m in war funding for the Hamas regime in Gaza. They were waved through among a group of pilgrims returning from Mecca without a demur from Israel.
Official sources in Jerusalem argued after the event that Israel’s relations with Egypt were of strategic value, even though Cairo was admittedly giving Hamas free rein to boost its war of terror against Israel. The thinking in the Israeli prime minister’s office is that calm relations with Egypt and its president - a week before US president George W. Bush’s visit to the region - count for more than the security of Ashkelon’s 105,000 inhabitants and the important national utilities located there.
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