JERUSALEM – Israel's defense minister has  expressed regret for the deaths of pro-Palestinian activists   in a clash with navy commandos. But he has blamed the violence on   organizers of a flotilla carrying aid to the blockaded Gaza Strip.  Speaking at a Monday news conference in Tel Aviv,  Ehud Barak called the aid  flotilla a "political provocation" by  anti-Israel forces. He said the  sponsors of the flotilla are violent. Israel's military chief, Lt. Gen.  Gabi Ashkenazi,  said soldiers were forced by violent activists to  respond with live  fire. At least 10 activists were killed in Monday  morning's  clash in international waters of Israel's Mediterranean  coast. THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for  further  information. AP's earlier story is below. JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli  commandos on Monday stormed  six ships carrying hundreds of  pro-Palestinian activists on an aid  mission to the blockaded Gaza  Strip, killing at least 10 people and  wounding dozens after  encountering unexpected resistance as the forces  boarded the vessels.  The operation in international waters off the Gaza  coast was a  nightmare scenario for Israel that looked certain to further  damage its  international standing, strain already tense relations  with Turkey — the  unofficial sponsor of the mission — and draw  unwanted attention to  Gaza's plight. The tough Israeli response drew  condemnations from  Turkey, France and the U.N.'s Mideast envoy, while  Greece suspended a  military exercise with Israel and postponed a visit  by Israel's air  force chief. About 10,000 Turks also marched from  Israel's  Consulate in Istanbul toward the city's main square, shouting  slogans  denouncing Israel.
The protesters earlier Monday tried storm  the  Consulate building but were blocked by police. In response, Israel  advised its citizens Monday to  avoid travel to Turkey and instructed  those already there to keep a low  profile and avoid crowded downtown  areas. The Israeli ambassadors in Sweden, Spain, Denmark and  Greece  were summoned for meetings, and the French foreign minister  called for  an investigation. Activists from all of those European  countries were  on board the flotilla. In neighboring Jordan, hundreds  demonstrated in  the capital Amman to protest the Israeli action and  demand that their  government breaks diplomatic relations with the Jewish  state. There  were conflicting accounts of what happened  early Monday. An Al-Jazeera  reporter on one of the Turkish ships  said the Israelis fired at the  vessel before boarding it.
The Israelis,  who had declared they would  not let the ships reach Gaza, said they only  opened fire after being  attacked by activists with sticks, knives and  live fire from weapons  seized from the Israeli commandos. "On board the ship we found weapons  prepared in  advance and used against our forces," declared Israel's deputy foreign minister, Danny Ayalon. "The  organizers' intent was violent, their method was  violent and the  results were unfortunately violent. Israel regrets any  loss of life and  did everything to avoid this outcome." Israeli security forces were on  alert across the  country. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas condemned  the Israeli  "aggression," declared three days of mourning across the  West Bank and  called on the U.N. Security Council and Arab League to  hold emergency  sessions on the incident. Ismail Haniyeh, leader of the  rival Hamas government  in Gaza, condemned the "brutal" Israeli attack  and called on U.N.  Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to intervene. The  activists were headed to Gaza on a mission meant  to draw attention to a  3-year-old Israeli blockade of the coastal  territory. Israel imposed  the blockade after Hamas, which it considers a  terrorist group,  violently seized the territory. Critics say the  blockade has unfairly  hurt Gaza's 1.5 million people.  "It's disgusting that they have come on  board and attacked civilians. We  are civilians," said Greta Berlin, a  spokeswoman for the Free Gaza  movement, which organized the flotilla.  She spoke from the Mediterranean island of Cyprus  and said she had lost  contact with the flotilla.  Before the ships set sail from waters off  the east Mediterranean island  of Cyprus on Sunday, Israel had urged the  flotilla not to try to breach  the blockade and offered to transfer the  cargo to Gaza from an Israeli  port, following a security inspection.
Israeli naval commandos stormed the ships in a predawn raid while they   were in international waters after ordering them to stop about 80 miles   (130 kilometers) from Gaza's coast, according to activists.  A Turkish  website showed video of pandemonium on board one of the ships,  with  activists in orange life jackets running around as some tried to  help  an activist apparently unconscious on the deck. The site also  showed  video of an Israeli helicopter flying overhead and Israeli  warships  nearby.  Turkey's NTV showed activists beating one Israeli soldier with  sticks as  he rappelled from a helicopter onto one of the boats.  The  al-Jazeera satellite channel reported by telephone from the Turkish   ship leading the flotilla that Israeli navy forces fired at the ship and   boarded it, wounding the captain.  "These savages are killing people  here, please help," a Turkish  television reporter said.  The broadcast  ended with a voice shouting in Hebrew, "Everybody shut  up!"  The  Israeli military said troops only opened fire after encountering   unexpected resistance from the activists. Activists attacked troops with   knives and iron rods, and opened fire with two pistols seized from the   forces.  A total of five soldiers were wounded, two seriously,  including at least  one hit by live fire, the army said. Two of the dead  activists had  fired at soldiers with pistols, the army said.  "They  planned this attack," said Israeli military spokeswoman Lt. Col.  Avital  Leibovitch. "Our soldiers were injured from these knives and  sharp  metal objects ... as well as from live fire."  The violent takeover  threatened to deal yet another blow  to Israel's international  image, already tarnished by war crimes  accusations in Gaza and its  blockade of the impoverished Palestinian  territory.  It occurred a day before Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu  was to meet  with President Barack Obama at the White House to discuss  the Middle  East peace process.  The ships were being towed to the  Israeli port of Ashdod, and wounded  were evacuated by helicopter to  Israeli hospitals, officials said. One  of the ships had reached port by  midday.  There were no details on the identities of the casualties, or  on the  conditions of some of the more prominent people on board,  including 1976  Nobel Peace Prize laureate Mairead Corrigan Maguire of  Northern  Ireland, European legislators and Holocaust survivor Hedy  Epstein, 85.
Satellite phones on board the ships were turned off, and  communication  with a small group of reporters   embedded with the Israeli military was blocked.  The Free Gaza Movement  is an international group of pro-Palestinian  activists that claims the  blockade, imposed three years ago after the  militant Islamic Hamas  group overran Gaza, is unjust and a violation of international law.  Organizers included people  affiliated with the International Solidarity  Movement, a  pro-Palestinian group that often sends international  activists into  battle zones, and the IHH, a Turkish aid group that  Israel accuses of  having terrorist links.  The Turkish Foreign Ministry condemned the  Israeli raid and said it was  summoning the Israeli ambassador for an  "urgent explanation."  Hasan Naiboglu, the Turkish maritime affairs  undersecretary, told the  Anatolia news agency that Israel had jammed  communications with the  ships. He accused Israel of violating  international law by carrying out  the raid in international waters.   Turkey had unofficially supported the aid mission and has been vocally   critical of Israeli military operations against Palestinians in Gaza.   Israel's Ynet news website said Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak   called Turkish officials, including the defense and foreign ministers,   to discuss the raid.  The United Nations expressed "shock" and condemned  the killings. "We are  in contact with the Israeli authorities to  express our deep concern and  to seek a full  explanation," said a statement from the highest-ranking  U.N. official in  the region, Robert Serry.  The flotilla of three  cargo ships and three passenger ships carrying  10,000 tons of aid and  700 activists was carrying items that Israel bars  from reaching Gaza,  like cement and other building materials.  This is the ninth time that  the Free Gaza movement has tried to ship in  humanitarian aid to Gaza  since August 2008.  Israel has allowed ships through five times, but has  blocked them from  entering Gaza waters since a three-week military  offensive against  Gaza's Hamas rulers in January 2009.  The latest  flotilla was the largest to date.  ___  Goldenberg reported from aboard  the Israeli warship INS Kidon. AP writer  Selcan Hacaoglu contributed to  this report from Ankara
 
 
                                   
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