Worldwide alarm at Israeli ground offensive

EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana said European nations stand ready to contribute international monitors to help keep the peace.

“The cease-fire has to be a cease-fire complied (with) by everybody and be clearly maintained,” Solana told the BBC.

European reaction to the ground offensive revealed a sharp difference in tone from the official U.S. line.

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said the decision to send troops into Gaza was a “dangerous military escalation”.

The European Union's new Czech presidency said Israel's ground operation was more “defensive than offensive”, although it said Israel did not have the right to take military actions “which largely affect civilians”.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit said Israel's incursion into the impoverished territory was in “brazen defiance” of international calls to end the offensive — and he blamed the Security Council for failing to act.

“The Security Council's silence and its failure to take a decision to stop Israel's aggression since it began was interpreted by Israel as a green light,” he said.

In Asia, Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said the Israeli offensive was “unjustified” and called for an immediate halt to the fighting.

Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso warned that Israel's ground offensive would only aggravate difficulties for all concerned.

“I'm very worried that the dispatch of ground troops will make the situation much worse,” he said.

There was outrage in Africa as well.

Senegalese Pesident Abdoulaye Wade, who also holds the presidency of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, called the Israeli ground offensive a “flagrant violation of the most elementary principles of international law.”

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 Worldwide alarm at Israeli ground offensive 
Thousands of protesters spilled into the streets of Montreal on Sunday, Jan. 4, 2009 calling on the Canadian government to apply pressure on Israel to stop its military offensive in Gaza. The sign reads: "Stop the Massacre." (AP)

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