HIGHLIGHTSHamas Vows Revenge||Bush at last Joins other World Leaders in Condemning the Massacre||Sharon Proud of his Crime||A One-ton Bomb Used in the Attack||An Arafat-Hamas Deal in the Making to Stop Bombings against Israeli Civilians Sabotaged by the Massacre|| STORY: Holding up the flag-wrapped body of a 2-month-old girl, tens of thousands of Palestinians marched Tuesday to bury their dead after a top Hamas leader was assassinated and 14 civilians civilians , including nine children were massacred in a random Israeli air strike in southern Gaza yesterday. The Palestinian Resistance group vowed revenge.
President Bush called the Israeli missile strike "heavy-handed," joining other world leaders in sharp criticism of the attack, which leveled an apartment building and destroyed other nearby buildings in a crowded neighborhood of Gaza City overnight. Palestinian doctors said more than 100 people were wounded.
The Israeli prime minister hailed the operation, which successfully targeted Salah Shehadeh, the top commander of Hamas' military wing, Izzadine el-Qassam.
"This operation was in my view one of our biggest successes," Ariel Sharon told Cabinet ministers. "We hit perhaps the most senior Hamas figure on the operational side," Sharon said of Shehadeh, who was jailed first by Israel, and then by the Palestinians, from 1988 to 1999.
However, some Israelis criticized the attack, warning that the killing of a top Hamas commander would trigger a surge of Resistance bombings in retaliation.
"The death of innocent children will only encourage more desire for revenge and motivation for more terror attacks," said member of parliament Ran Cohen, a reserve colonel in the Israeli military.
Israel linked Shehadeh to Hamas' deadliest Resistance bombings.
Israel TV said the bomb weighed a ton, unusually large for a mission to kill a single militant. In dozens of previous operations, Israeli forces have used helicopters to fire missiles at vehicles or rooms in a building, or set off small bombs in vehicles.
Palestinians said Israel dropped a large bomb in an attempted killing in the Gaza city of Khan Yunis on July 14.
In the past, one-ton bombs have been dropped on large, empty structures to destroy them. In March, when an Israeli plane dropped such a bomb on Arafat's empty headquarters building in Bethlehem, windows rattled in Jerusalem, five miles away.
AN EMOTIONAL ANGRY FUNERAL
In Gaza, tens of thousands crowded the streets in an emotional and angry funeral procession for Shehadeh and the other victims of the Israeli massacre.
As wailing relatives held aloft the youngest victim wrapped in a Palestinian flag, the infant's face and black hair visible between the folds, gunmen fired rifles in the air and called for revenge.
For hours, the huge crowd of Palestinians marched through the streets toward the cemetery, waving flags of various Palestinian groups, chanting slogans against Israel and threatening more bombings in retaliation for the killing.
"Do you want peace with the Jews?" asked an activist with a loudspeaker. "No!" the crowd responded.
WORLDWIDE CONDEMNATION OF THE CRIME
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat called the attack a "disgusting, ugly crime, ... a massacre no human being can imagine." Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal called the strike a "horrible act" with "no ethical, moral or even military justification."
In a rare U.S. criticism of Israel, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said "this heavy-handed action does not contribute to peace."
The office of U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said "Israel has the legal and moral responsibility to take all measures to avoid the loss of innocent life." Swedish Foreign Minister Anna Lindh called it "a crime against international law and morally unworthy of a democracy like Israel."
AN ARAFAT HAMAS DEAL IN THE MAKING TO STOP RESISTANCE BOMBINGS AGAINST ISRAELI CIVILIANS SABOTAGED BY THE ISRAELI MASSACRE
Palestinians said Arafat was close to an agreement with Hamas to stop attacks on Israeli civilians and the airstrike would sabotage the deal.
Arafat aide Nabil Abu Rdeneh said Israel knew agreement was near, but Sharon sabotaged it because "his only solution is violence and more violence."
Even so, a senior Palestinian official speaking on condition of anonymity said that the Palestinians still stood by a proposal for a cease-fire that was presented to Israeli officials in a meeting last weekend.
According to the proposal, which was made available to the Associated Press, Israel would end its occupation of Palestinian cities, withdraw to the lines that existed before violence erupted in September 2000, release prisoners and stop killing so-called terror suspects.
In exchange, the Palestinians would restructure their security services, resume security cooperation with Israel, collect illegal weapons and arrest activists.
Before the heinous massacre, Hamas officials said they would consider stopping Resistance bomb attacks if Israel withdrew from Palestinian towns and cities and stopped its killing of suspected activists. Palestinians charge that the targeted operations amount to Israeli assassination of their leaders.
PHOTO CAPTION
Palestinian boys march with guns during the funeral of 15 Palestinians who were massacred during an Israeli missile strike in Gaza, July 23, 2002. Israel assassinated the commander of the military wing of Hamas and massacred14 other Palestinians including nine children in the air raid on his home that also wiped out a crowded city block, hospital officials said. Photo by Ahmed Jadallah/Reuters
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