State Dept.: Gaza Death Toll ‘Horrifying’

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration criticized Israel on Thursday for failing to do all it can to prevent civilian casualties in Gaza during cross-border attacks as Israel and Hamas consider a cease-fire agreement.

Noting the deaths a day earlier of four boys who were killed on a Gaza beach by an Israeli strike, the State Department said the high civilian death toll in Gaza has been “heartbreaking.” Three more children were killed in Gaza on Thursday.

Still, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki also criticized Hamas militants in Gaza who continue to fire rockets and mortars into Israel, prolonging the latest round of violence in the Mideast that has so far killed 235 Palestinians and at least one Israeli.

I don’t think we’ve made any secret about our strong concern about the actions of Hamas, the indiscriminate rocket attacks, the targeting of civilians,” Psaki said. “And that concern remains.”

Of the Gaza beach attacks that killed four cousins on Wednesday, Psaki called the attack “horrifying.”

“The tragic event makes clear that Israel must take every possible step to meet its standards for protecting civilians from being killed,” Psaki said. “We will continue to underscore that point to Israel.”

Asked if the U.S. believes Israel has not done enough to prevent civilian casualties, Psaki said: “We believe that certainly there’s more that can be done.”

The U.S. has been pushing plans for a cease-fire that Egypt proposed, and Secretary of State John Kerry spoke Thursday to top diplomats in Cairo and the Qatari capital Doha to try to negotiate an end to hostilities that entered their eleventh day. Kerry spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday, Psaki said.

But fierce fighting between Israel and the militant group Hamas in Gaza resumed almost immediately after a five-hour lull in attacks that the United Nations brokered to let Palestinians stock up on food and supplies after days of staying at home for protection. There were intermittent rocket attacks during the lull as well.

Palestinian militants fired more than 50 rockets at Israel, including a barrage at the Tel Aviv area, according to the Israeli military.

Israel responded with airstrikes, including the one that killed three youngsters in Gaza City, said a Gaza health ministry spokesman.

The latest wave of violence was spurred by last month’s kidnapping and killings of three Israeli teenagers who bodies were found in the West Bank, followed almost immediately by what authorities believe was a retribution attack on a Palestinian youth who was strangled, beaten and burned to death .

But tensions between Israel and Palestinian authorities have been simmering for years. They threatened to boil over earlier this spring when Israel shelved nearly nine months of peace negotiations that were being personally shepherded by Kerry after Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas agreed to create a unity government with Hamas.

___

Follow Lara Jakes on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/larajakesAP and Matthew Lee at: https://twitter.com/APDiploWriter

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  1. What were you expecting from the Israel War machine?

    Now they’re starting a ground offensive and bull-dozing housing for thousands of people after bombing (destroying) hundred of multi-family buildings.

    Punishing the civilians of Gaza. Again.

  2. What’s interesting is the state department is finally acknowledging it.

  3. I know it 's a different administration but it’s hard for the US to take the high ground when 100,000 innocent Iraqis have been estimated to have been killed in collateral attacks during the US War in Iraq.

  4. It is absolutely not hard. All it would take is a little intellectual honesty and some intestinal fortitude. But the stance taken here shows not much of either. It makes the issue the 4 boys, not the barbarity of the Israeli project as a whole.

  5. Some intellectual honesty? Like the US government refusing to offer an official accounting of who’s being killed by drone strikes? Even though most human rights groups insist the US is underreporting the casualties from drone strikes, the government has acknowledged more than 2,500 dead in the last 5 years.

    And yet you suggest the US can take the high road in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with “a little intellectual honesty and some intestinal fortitude.” Can I hear the words you envision in this scenario, please? The drone death toll swamps that of the Israelis who are, at the very least, dealing with hostile borders, while the US runs up a kill total halfway around the world. What will this “intellectual honesty” sound like?

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