Israelis Wary of Truce as Troops Withdraw from Gaza
Waving her son goodbye as he boarded a bus carrying his unit away from Israel's border with Gaza, Orly Doron was relieved but apprehensive about the lull in fighting Tuesday.
Doron comes from Kfar Aza kibbutz close to Gaza, where her son has been involved in the intense fighting that has left areas of the Palestinian enclave in ruins.
But the guns fell silent Tuesday with the beginning of a 72-hour truce after fighting that has left 1,867 Palestinians dead, mostly civilians, and 67 people on the Israeli side -- almost all soldiers.
Kfar Aza has been regularly hit by the mortar and rocket fire Israel said it was trying to stop when it began its offensive on July 9, and Doron is skeptical about whether this lull will bring a permanent end to it.
"I never trust Hamas; we don't trust them," she told Agence France Presse.
"You know, we're just three hours from the time the ceasefire started. Let's see if it is actually kept. We had three or four ceasefires during this war; we all saw they weren't kept."
In a sun-baked field down the road, troops fresh from operations looked glad to be away from the front.
Dozens of dust-covered tanks sat parked in the field, just kilometers from the border as their crews laughed and smoked.
The young soldiers talked happily as they worked atop their vehicles, some flying the Israeli flag.
On a track next to the field, tanks and trucks occasionally passed, kicking fresh trails of dust into the air as they left.
They were among the last troops pulling back from that part of the border Tuesday.
The day before, the roads around the field had been clogged with military vehicles as Israel redeployed its forces away from the area.
Despite the apparent calm along the border early Tuesday, an officer from the armored unit was guarded about the prospects for a lasting truce
"It's not my job to worry about this," he shrugged. "It's my job to be ready".
Asked if he was ready to resume fighting, he said: "Of course, as always".
At a service station just inside Israel, more soldiers huddled round tables, in transit to military bases and homes away from the border.
Some wore olive-green uniforms white with dried sweat, and all carried rifles slung across their backs.
Sat a little way from the soldiers was 71-year-old Israela Yoed who was heading back to her home 500 meters from the border.
She has lived in Kibbutz Nahal-Oz for 50 years, and was among the few to stay on as Israeli troops pounded Gaza from nearby.
"We had thousands of soldiers in our fields and most of the people left our kibbutz," she said.
Many people living along the border who have put up with rocket fire for years, ended up leaving area this time after troops uncovered a sophisticated network of cross-border tunnels used by militants for infiltrating southern Israel.
Earlier Tuesday, the army confirmed completing a mission to destroy them, saying it had demolished 32 such tunnels.
As the truce got under way, Yoed was quietly hopeful, saying she was "80 per cent" sure it would hold.
Although she also said she didn't trust Hamas, she was grateful for the brief lull in violence, and hoped that a lasting solution could be reached.
"I believe that we can make things better through negotiations," she beamed.
But if the ceasefire fails and troops take up positions around her home, she said she would not be moved.
"I won't leave; I'm not afraid," she said.
i dont give a damn about Orly Doron and her son, or Israela Yoed.
by focusing only on israelis and trying to induce sympathy for the army that just killed almost two thousand civilians, this article makes me feel i just read the yedioth-naharnoth
Instead of your responses as if if you are interested into what is going on in other countries, why don't you take notice of the destruction that is going on in your own country, by Hizballah and in Arsal.
your comment doesnt make sense, being interested in one thing does not prevent from being interested in another.
i guess as an israeli it bothers you that people are taking notice of what you're doing to palestinians, you wish we werent looking, dont you?
yet, being yourself so interested in Lebanon and always reading and commenting on our news, you should have noticed i commented on many ongoing issues here.
that is not called "facts" by any definition of the term.
at best, he's trying to divert attention from israeli crimes onto the syrian war.
did people say "nevermind hitler, he only killed a few millions stalin killed 10x as much" ? would that be an argument to say the holocaust is no big deal? please give me your chosen people's opinion on that. thanks.