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Eager to widen fight beyond missiles, terrorists bomb Tel Aviv bus

They all thought it was a missile at first. In the split second between the sudden explosion and the smoke that enveloped their bodies and faces, they figured that a Hamas rocket, after a week of strikes and misses, had hit the center of Tel Aviv. Then they realized that the bus had been bombed.
[additional-authors]
November 21, 2012

They all thought it was a missile at first.

In the split second between the sudden explosion and the smoke that enveloped their bodies and faces, they figured that a Hamas rocket, after a week of strikes and misses, had hit the center of Tel Aviv. Then they realized that the bus had been bombed.

“The bus stopped, there was an explosion and everything was black,” Elinor Lampel, who was driving next to the bus, told JTA. “I didn’t understand. There was no warning siren. When the smoke cleared, I saw it was a terrorist attack.”

Police said a bomb stuffed with ball bearings and screws was placed on the bus. Twenty-one passengers reportedly were wounded, two of them seriously.

The explosion quickly was followed by the shrill blare of ambulances, fire trucks and police cars converging on the city center, and helicopters hovering overhead. Police officers, soldiers and paramedics swarmed the few blocks surrounding the bus, cordoning off a large swath of empty streets. The bus remained in the middle of the road, the front half still mostly intact.

A week into Israel’s operation in Gaza, Tel Aviv residents had come to expect sirens warning of imminent Hamas missile attacks. But this latest attack – which came as the bus was passing the Kirya, the military headquarters located in the center of Tel Aviv — more closely resembled those of the second intifada, when Palestinian terrorists routinely detonated bombs on crowded Israeli city buses. The last time a terrorist bomb went off in the city was 2006, when a restaurant was targeted.

Nobody has yet claimed responsibility for Wednesday’s attack. Israeli Internal Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovich told reporters that either Hamas or Islamic Jihad terrorists perpetrated the bus bombing.

So far, four Israelis and more than 140 Palestinians have been reported killed since Israel launched Operation Pillar of Defense on Nov. 14 with the assassination of military chief Ahmed Jabari. That assassination followed several days of intense rocket bombardment on southern Israel, and Hamas stepped up its rocket fire against Israel after the operation began. Hamas missiles have reached as far as the Jerusalem and Tel Aviv areas, nearly 50 miles away.

Egyptian-brokered cease-fire negotiations between Israel and Hamas are ongoing.

Israelis should “concentrate on targets in Gaza, and see who did this,” Aharonovich said. “The most important thing is for them to stop firing at the south.”

Hamas’ rocket attacks notwithstanding, this bombing is a sign that Gaza’s terrorists are eager to expand the range of their attacks and use whatever means they can to strike in Israel.

Police Spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said police suspect that a terrorist entered the bus, placed a relatively small bomb in the middle of the aisle and exited before it blew up. Another bomb was placed on the bus did not detonate, he said.

Bus driver Nahum Herzig said the bus had been crowded but not full, and that nobody on the bus had aroused his suspicions.

“I couldn’t find anybody I could point to as suspicious,” he said. While drivers had been told to take the usual precautions against bus bombings, “we didn’t get specific warnings.”

Uninjured himself, Herzig began to tend to wounded passengers, as did Lampel, who teaches a first aid course. But before they knew it, paramedics were pushing them into ambulances.

Another wounded passenger, Tal Bechor, said she had just realized that she was on the wrong bus and had planned to get off at the next stop when the explosion went off.

“I was sure a missile had hit,” she said. “I lost consciousness for a few minutes, and then I checked my head.”

Bechor said her head, ears and knees hurt.

Lampel had been returning to her home in Rishon Lezion, the city just south of Tel Aviv that suffered a direct missile hit on an apartment building on Tuesday.

“It’s not pleasant at all,” she said. “There’s a lot of fear.”

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