JERUSALEM -- Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Sunday he would push ahead with the army's widescale offensive in the Gaza Strip, saying the fight to free an abducted soldier and stop militant rocket fire would last for a "long time."
The 12-day-old operation has caused widespread destruction in Gaza, left 51 Palestinians dead and led to international complaints that Israel was using excessive force.
Despite the offensive, militants launched three rockets into Israel on Sunday, wounding one person in the town of Sderot and damaging a house. Also, militants linked to the Palestinians' ruling Hamas party maintained their refusal to free Cpl. Gilad Shalit, who was captured in a June 25 raid, or even reveal his condition.
An Israeli airstrike Sunday night targeted a car carrying Hamas militants near Gaza City, wounding five people, including an 8-year-old girl, Palestinian health officials said. The vehicle was filled with explosives, which led to a series of large secondary explosions, the army said.
Israeli aircraft attacked a building early Monday on the outskirts of Gaza City, setting it on fire, Palestinians said. No injuries were reported. The military said the building was used by Islamic Jihad to make weapons.
Before daybreak, aircraft fired a missile at a group of militants near Gaza City, killing one and seriously wounding another, Palestinian hospital officials said. The military said a missile had been fired at militants on their way to launch a rocket.
Speaking to the Israeli Cabinet, Olmert counseled patience.
"We're talking about a war that will continue for a long time, and it is complicated," Olmert said, according to a participant in the meeting. "This is a war for which we cannot set down a timetable and we can't say how long it will continue."
The Cabinet expressed unanimous support for the military action in Gaza and Olmert's refusal to negotiate with the militants, who demanded the release of 1,500 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for information about Shalit, 19.
Israeli security officials told the Cabinet that the offensive, the army's largest operation in Gaza since Israel withdrew from the territory last summer, was likely to force the militants to scale back their demands, according to the participant in the meeting, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the meeting was closed to the press.
But Palestinians were widely supportive of the militants' actions. A poll released Sunday showed that 77 percent of those questioned backed Shalit's kidnapping and 67 percent said they supported further abductions. Sixty-nine percent said the soldier should only be released in exchange for prisoners.
The survey of 1,197 Palestinians by the Jerusalem Media and Communication Center had a margin of error of 3 percentage points.
Olmert told the Cabinet that before Shalit was captured, he had been planning a prisoner release as a goodwill gesture to moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, but now a release appears out of the question.
"It's not a secret before the kidnapping that we would free prisoners. But we intended to release them to moderate elements and not to terrorist elements," Olmert said.
"The release of prisoners means destroying the moderates in the Palestinian Authority, and would signal to the world that Israel can only talk to extremists."
Since the offensive began June 28, Israeli forces have battered Gaza with artillery barrages and airstrikes. One airstrike Sunday missed a car carrying members of a Hamas rocket squad and killed a bystander instead, Palestinian health officials said. The army confirmed it carried out an airstrike.
The United Nations blamed Israel for widespread human rights violations and hardship to civilians in Gaza.
Palestinian hospital officials say at least 51 Palestinians have been killed and more than 180 wounded in the offensive.
One Israeli soldier was killed last week, and military officials said Sunday an initial inquiry showed he was shot accidentally by Israeli forces.
Olmert and other ministers said they were not overly concerned about the international reaction.
"Anybody who calls this operation disproportionate has no clue about the facts on the ground. We have been attacked and bombarded for months and weeks," Cabinet minister Yitzhak Herzog said.
"With all due respect to all those who criticize us, if anything of this nature would have happened in their homeland, they would have acted much worse."
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