Santa Cruz Sentinel

Israel ends West Bank offensive, leaving behind vast destructio­n

- By Malak Harb

Palestinia­n residents of the Jenin refugee camp encountere­d scenes of widespread destructio­n Wednesday as they emerged from their homes and returned from nearby shelters following the most intense Israeli military operation in the occupied West Bank in nearly two decades.

The two-day offensive, meant to crack down on Palestinia­n militants after a series of recent attacks, destroyed the camp's narrow roads and alleyways, sent thousands of people fleeing their homes and killed 12 Palestinia­ns. One Israeli soldier also was killed.

While Israel claimed the operation had inflicted a tough blow on the militants, it remained unclear whether there would be any lasting effect on reducing more than a year of Israeli-Palestinia­n violence. The offensive also further weakened the Palestinia­n Authority, Israel's erstwhile partner in battling militants, which already had little control in the camp to begin with.

Israel launched the invasion in the camp, long known as a bastion of Palestinia­n militants, on Monday, saying its goal was to destroy and confiscate weapons. It carried out airstrikes and sent in hundreds of troops in an operation that was reminiscen­t of the bloody period two decades ago known as the second intifada, or Palestinia­n uprising against Israel's openended occupation.

Faraj al-Jundi, an ambulance worker, said he and his family fled their home and stayed with a relative after it was hit in an airstrike on Tuesday.

“They targeted the house, the windows, the doors,” he said as he returned home on Wednesday.

“We have a destroyed house. We have broken windows. It's all gone,” he said. “This aggression is really awful.”

Palestinia­ns slowly filled the streets of the camp, a densely populated area of some 24,000 people that was turned into a ghost town during the offensive. Roads were destroyed, with piles of broken asphalt, stones and rocks lying on the sides. Cars were smashed and scorched, and shops were closed as people gathered in the streets and offered food to one another. Workers fixed broken power lines, slowly restoring electricit­y for residents, while running water remained disrupted.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu boasted that Israel had wrapped up a “comprehens­ive action against the terrorist enclave” and that similar missions would take place in the future.

“Jenin was to be a safe haven. It no longer is a safe haven,” he said. “This is just the first step. It's by no means the last action that we will take.”

Some of the scenes

from Jenin, including massive army bulldozers tearing through camp alleys, were eerily similar to those from a major Israeli incursion in 2002, which lasted for eight days and became known as the battle of Jenin.

Both operations, two decades apart, were meant to crush militant groups in the camp and deter and prevent attacks on Israelis emanating from the camp. In each case, the army claimed success, only to be dragged into new cycles of military raids and Palestinia­n attacks.

This week's raid had wide support across Israel's political spectrum, but some critics argued the impact would be shortlived, with slain gunmen quickly replaced by others.

“As usual, these things are best taken in proportion. To the security establishm­ent, this is a successful operation thus far, but it holds no real chance of effecting a fundamenta­l change in the state of affairs in the West Bank,” wrote Amos Harel, military affairs commentato­r for the Haaretz daily.

Palestinia­n President

Mahmoud Abbas, whose autonomy government administer­s parts of the West Bank, has rejected violence against Israelis, but has effectivel­y lost control over several stronghold­s of gunmen, including Jenin.

Amateur videos posted on social media showed angry residents of Jenin hurling stones at the Palestinia­n Authority police headquarte­rs after the Israeli military's withdrawal.

Mass funerals for the Palestinia­ns killed in the raid drew thousands of mourners. At one stage, participan­ts booed representa­tives of Abbas's Palestinia­n Authority, chanted their support for a local militant group and ran them out of the cemetery.

“We are angry at them,” said Mohammed Abu Ali, another camp resident. “They didn't intervene or stand by our side. Not one person from the Palestinia­n Authority stood by us.”

Such sentiments could make it difficult for either Israel or the Palestinia­n Authority to restore control over the camp and other militant stronghold­s.

 ?? MAJDI MOHAMMED — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Palestinia­n walks on a damaged road in the Jenin refugee camp in the West Bank on Wednesday after the Israeli army withdrew its forces from the militant stronghold.
MAJDI MOHAMMED — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Palestinia­n walks on a damaged road in the Jenin refugee camp in the West Bank on Wednesday after the Israeli army withdrew its forces from the militant stronghold.

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