
The Palestinian missile offensive from Gaza was still going strong Sunday  night, Nov. 11, after two days and more than 110 rockets - for a number of  reasons, debkafile reports.   For one, Hamas can’t bring all the Palestinian militias ranged against Israel  under a single operational command center contrary to its claim. The most  important groups, the Iranian-backed Jihad Islami, the various Salafi extremist  factions - some associated with al Qaeda - and the Popular Front all cling to  their independence of action. Any Hamas order to hold their fire, if it were  given, would be disobeyed. This defiance is eroding Hamas’authority as rulers of  Gaza.
Furthermore, Hamas and fellow terrorist group leaders believe Prime  Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is undecided about how to proceed in Gaza. They are  counting on his being unable to bring himself to order a major military  operation to cut them down to size and put a stop to the deadly cycle of a  rocket barrage recurring every few days, year after year. And so the shooting  goes on.
debkafile’s military sources  report that Egyptian military intelligence chief Gen. Mohamed al-Assad entered  the scene Sunday, Nov. 11 to try his hand at brokering yet another truce. He has  his work cut out  - not just to bring the Gaza government and Israel together,  but also to line up the rival factions of Gaza in concurrence.
The Egyptian  general knows from past experience that the best he can achieve is a tacit,  fragile truce to which Hamas and Israel acquiesce silently on the principle of  reciprocity: both sides must hold their fire and if the Palestinian go back to  violence, the IDF will hit back.
Similar arrangements have rarely held up in the past beyond a few weeks at  most.  But this time, new elements have crept in. Hamas Prime Minister Ismail  Haniyeh and his government, who until now stood in the wings of military  activity, decided Sunday to pledge solidarity with the Palestinian missile jihad  against Israel.
After all, the Islamist Hamas movement is dedicated by its  charter to Israel’s destruction.
The view in Washington, which is involved in  the chase for a truce, is that Haniyeh’s action promises that any ceasefire will  be short-lived, measured in days rather than weeks.  Gaza’s rulers are convinced  they are well placed to exploit the Israeli prime minister’s irresolution as he  goes into a campaign for reelection (on Jan. 22, 2013) by turning up the heat on  Israel.
But Netanyahu has another kind of pressure to consider. The  million-strong constituency of southern Israel may not let him get away with a  temporary, fragile stoppage of the rockets that make their lives unbearable.  They may make him pay for inaction at the ballot-box.
Netanyahu must also  take into consideration that a major IDF operation in Gaza might risk igniting  two more war fronts, should Hamas’ allies Syria and the Lebanese Hizballah come  to its aid.
Regarding Syria, Israel fired a Tamuz guided missile 4 kilometers  into Syria as a warning to Damascus that Israel would not tolerate ordnance from  the Syrian civil war continuing to fall on Israeli Golan. It was a warning shot  after a shell landed in Moshav Alonei Bashan.
 debkafile’s intelligence sources  reveal that Damascus send back through UNDORF peacemakers a message of  reassurance that the spillover into Israel would stop. Israel was given to  understand that the mortar position responsible for the stray shell landing in  the moshav had been silenced.
Our military sources note that the battery may  have been silenced but it was not pulled back. In fact it remains in the same  position as before. Therefore, it stands ready to fire in the event of a  decision in Damascus to resume firing shells into Israel. Netanyahu is keeping a  weather eye on that sector, as well as the Gaza front.