Israel's prime minister has instructed his government to draw up plans for a "world wide campaign" to lobby for changes in the international laws of war.
The order from Binyamin Netanyahu follows a special cabinet meeting on Tuesday to discuss Israel's response to the UN's Goldstone report, which condemned Israel's actions during the 22-day war on Gaza earlier this year.
The meeting also called for the formation of a special committee to deal with the international legal consequences of the report and the prospect Israeli officials could face war crimes trials abroad.
The Israeli government contends international law "needs to be amended in order to fight global terrorism."
"The prime minister instructed the relevant government bodies to examine a worldwide campaign to amend the international laws of war to adapt them to the spread of global terrorism," Netanyahu's office said in a statement following Tuesday's meeting.
It added that the cabinet had also instructed justice ministry officials to form a committee to deal with the prospect of "legal proceedings abroad against the state of Israel or its citizens".
"We need to keep punching a hole in this lie that is spreading with the help of the Goldstone report," Netanyahu was quoted as saying in the statement.
'Freedom of action'
The statement was backed by Israel's defense minister, Ehud Barak, who said a change in the international laws of war was "in the interest of anyone fighting terrorism".
He added that the government wanted to give the Israeli military "the full backing to have the freedom of action."
On Friday, the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) endorsed the report, but Netanyahu has promised that it will be vetoed at the UN General Assembly.
Israel has previously called the report unbalanced, while Netanyahu has promised a lengthy fight to "delegitimize" the findings by the UN commission.
An Israeli official, speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity, said the issue of establishing an official inquiry into the conduct of the military during the Gaza campaign was not raised at Tuesday's meeting.
Goldstone attacked
Richard Goldstone himself has faced a storm of personal attacks inside Israel since the report's publication.
But on Monday he urged the Israeli government to comply with calls for a full investigation into the war, rejecting suggestions that the report risked sinking the stalled Middle East peace process.
"It's a shallow, utterly false allegation," Goldstone said during a meeting with a group of rabbis in the United States.
"What peace process are they talking about? There isn't one."
PHOTO CAPTION
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gestures as he delivers a speech.