Lieberman Says No Truce without End to All Gaza Fire

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Israel's Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said on Sunday that Israel would not negotiate a truce with Gaza Strip's Hamas rulers as long as rocket fire continues from the Palestinian enclave.

"The first and absolute condition for a truce is stopping all fire from Gaza," he said before meeting French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, adding that all militant factions in Gaza would have to commit to cease rocket fire.

"We want a long-term arrangement," Lieberman said.

His remarks came on the fifth day of strikes on Gaza which left 55 people dead, while militants from the Strip fired hundreds of rockets at the Jewish state, one of which killed three.

Earlier on Sunday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel was ready to "significantly expand" its operation against militants in the Hamas-run Gaza Strip even as he prepared to receive Fabius, who is on a whirlwind truce mission to the region to promote a truce.

Speaking alongside Lieberman, Fabius said the current situation was "an emergency situation.

"War must be avoided, and can be avoided," he said.

"The solution is a ceasefire. We want to help to find the terms of a ceasefire," Fabius said.

Comments 1
Missing phillipo 18 November 2012, 22:01

What truce do Hamas want?
That they can continue firing into Israel, and Israel will be forbidden to respond?