Israel pounds Gaza again
By Nidal al-Mughrabi
GAZA (Reuters) - Israeli aircraft and tanks pounded the Gaza Strip on Wednesday and troops battled Palestinian guerrillas on the ground as U.S. backing for a proposed truce raised expectations of an end to the 12-day-old offensive.
"We believe a ceasefire is necessary," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said, adding that she was pressing Israel to move forward with an Egyptian proposal backed by Europeans.
Israel's assault resumed fiercely after a first, brief pause to help Gaza's 1.5 million people stock up on supplies.
But with both the outgoing administration of George W. Bush and the hitherto silent President-elect Barack Obama speaking out on the need for peace, officials said Israel had agreed with the "principles" of the Egyptian deal and would send an envoy to Cairo to discuss details of how it might be put into practice.
That may yet take time.
Rice echoed Israel's concerns that a deal achieve its goal of stopping the Hamas Islamists who rule Gaza from hitting Israel with rockets: "It has to be a ceasefire that will not allow a return to the status quo," she said.
However, Israeli ministers put off a decision on whether to launch a new phase of the war by storming Gaza's urban centers. 続く...
米景気対策第2弾を支持せず
バイデン米副大統領は、オバマ大統領と大統領の側近は景気刺激策第2弾の実施を支持しないと述べた。 記事の全文















