TEL AVIV - Likud party “rebels” opposed to the scheduled disengagement from Gaza and parts of the West Bank announced Sunday the launching of a new anti-pullout campaign. The campaign, titled, ”Disengagement will bring terror. We must reconsider,” is expected to include posting of some 1,000 ads on buses, distribution of information booklets to every citizen, posting of advertisements on the Internet and meetings between the campaign’s initiators and Israelis. Contributors from overseas are financing the campaign, and the “rebels” have denied the Yesha Council is involved in it. Knesset Member Uzi Landau said during a Tel Aviv press conference public debate on the issue must be renewed. "Unfortunately, the media is doing what it had done prior to the Yom Kippur and after Oslo," he said. "It is painting a picture whereby only settlers oppose the disengagement.” He said the "real debate" is within (southern city of) Ashkelon neighborhoods that will become cannon fodder (after the pullout,) and among Afula residents who will be targeted by Qassam rockets,” he said. Knesset Member David Levy said the public is concerned over the pullout. “We are waging a parliamentary battle with the purpose of postponing this plan, which was based on illusion and deception,” he said. The “rebels” presented a survey conducted by “Spin,” a company that specializes in strategic political campaigns, which showed only 55 percent of the population support the disengagement, and 70 percent of those who do back the plan do not support it wholeheartedly and said they would object to it if it would boost terror. According to the survey, some 48 percent of the population believes Prime Minister Ariel Sharon is advancing the pullout plan in a non-democratic manner, as opposed to some 44 percent who said he is promoting the move democratically. Knesset Member Ehud Yatom called on Israelis to open their eyes and not follow the leadership “blindly.” “Citizens of Israel, you have been warned," he said.