Violence continues despite Gaza ceasefire

Israel carried out air strikes and Palestinians launched mortar bomb attacks today despite a ceasefire in the Hamas-ruled Gaza…

Israel carried out air strikes and Palestinians launched mortar bomb attacks today despite a ceasefire in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip, but Israel's defence minister said a wider offensive was not imminent.

Responding to Egyptian efforts to broker a long-term truce, a Hamas spokesman said it would be prepared to halt hostilities for a year if a deal could be reached on lifting Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip and reopening border crossings.

An Israeli aircraft attacked a car in the southern Gaza town of Rafah on the Egyptian border, killing one militant and wounding three other gunmen, medical officials said, identifying them as members of the Popular Resistance Committees.

The Israeli military said it targeted a squad that fired two mortar bombs into southern Israel. A Popular Resistance Committees spokesman said the dead gunman was a rocket-launching crew leader.

Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert pledged yesterday to mount a "disproportionate" military response to continuing rocket salvoes that Palestinian militants have described as payback for fresh Israeli attacks.

But his defence minister, Ehud Barak, signalled Israel would stop short of all-out war.

"It is not our intention to have an Operation Cast Lead 2," he said in an interview with the YNet news website.

"We said there would be a response and there was a response last night," Mr Barak said about yesterday's air strikes.

Mr Barak's comments clashed with statements later today by foreign Mminister Tzipi Livni. "We will continue to strike at Hamas. And our strategic goal cannot be to accept their existence," Ms Livni said in speech.

"If a deterrence has not been achieved at the end of the campaign, we will continue to do so until they get the message. We will respond to every attack, every shooting at Israel, every attack on Israeli sovereignty and continue to take action if there is a need," she said.

Both Mr Barak, head of the centre-left Labour Party, and Ms Livni, chairman of the ruling, centrist Kadima party, are candidates for prime minister in Israel's election next week. Opinion polls forecast victory for right-winger Benjamin Netanyahu of Likud.

A police spokesman said the Palestinian attack caused no casualties or damage. Sirens warning of more rocket launchings sounded later in the day but an army spokesman said there was no confirmation any had landed in Israeli territory.

Yesterday, Israeli planes attacked a Hamas security complex and smuggling tunnels under the Gaza-Egypt border.

There were no reported casualties in those strikes, the Israeli military said. The attacks followed the firing of about a dozen rockets and mortar bombs into southern Israel yesterday, which wounded two Israeli soldiers and a civilian.

Israel and the Gaza Strip's Hamas rulers put a ceasefire into effect on January 18th after the Israeli offensive that medical officials in the enclave said killed 1,300 Palestinians, including 700 civilians