Imperial Valley Press

What’s behind the Israeli army’s deadly Nablus arrest raid?

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JERUSALEM ( AP) — The northern West Bank city of Nablus, the Palestinia­n commercial center, resembled a war zone on Wednesday, after a daytime Israeli military raid triggered a firefight that killed at least 10 Palestinia­ns and wounded more than 100 others.

It was the latest bloody escalation in a monthslong surge of Israeli raids into the the occupied territory that has led to the deaths of some 200 Palestinia­ns and the arrest of at least 2,600 others. Last month, a similarly deadly raid in the northern West Bank city of Jenin triggered a Palestinia­n attack outside a synagogue in Jerusalem and a burst of rocket fire from Gaza.

This period of heightened violence in the West Bank and east Jerusalem has prompted comparison­s with aspects of the second intifada, or Palestinia­n uprising, in the early 2000s and stoked fears of further bloodshed under the most right-wing government in Israel’s history. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s new ultranatio­nalist coalition has vowed to take a hardline stance against the Palestinia­ns and to entrench Israeli rule over lands they seek for a future state.

WHY DID THE ISRAELI ARMY ENTER NABLUS?

Much of the violence between Israelis and Palestinia­ns for the past year has focused on Nablus, along with the nearby city of Jenin. The Israeli military said Wednesday’s daytime raid targeted a Nablus-based armed group of young men known as the Lions’ Den, which emerged last year. The group has surged in popularity among Palestinia­ns who see them as heroes for fighting Israel’s open- ended occupation of the West Bank, now in its 56th year. Although the Lion’s Den portrays itself as independen­t of establishe­d Palestinia­n factions, experts say the group is funded by Islamist militant groups Hamas and Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad. Israel has blamed the Lion’s Den for a string of shootings aimed at troops and Israeli settlement­s in the past months, including one that killed a soldier last October.

WHY DID THE RAID TAKE PLACE DURING THE DAY?

The Israeli army usually raids cities in the West Bank late at night in what it says is a tactic meant to reduce the risk of civilian casualties. But on Wednesday, as Israeli military vehicles rumbled into Nablus’ Old City, its warren of homes and shops teeming with vendors and residents going about their routines under the bright sky. Fighting between Israeli security forces and Palestinia­n gunmen erupted in the stone alleys and the Israeli army even fired missiles at a house after the militants holed up there refused to surrender. The Israeli military said intelligen­ce services had tracked down three wanted members of the Lion’s Den, including one involved in the killing of the Israeli soldier last fall, and determined they were all in the same house — offering a rare window of opportunit­y to target them. The army claimed the militants posed an immediate threat to Israeli lives, without providing evidence.

WHO WAS KILLED IN THE RAID?

At least 10 Palestinia­ns were killed, including a 16-year-old boy and older men 72 and 61. The Lion’s Den claimed six of the dead as its members. A 66- year- old later died from tear gas inhalation, officials said. Other men were killed in unclear circumstan­ces that the Israeli army said it was

investigat­ing. CCTV footage widely shared online showed two young men, apparently unarmed, shot after sprinting down the street, away from echoing gunfire. Another video circulatin­g on social media, confirmed by witnesses, shows the body of 72-yearold Adnan Baara inert on the ground of the Old City market, his clothes covered in dust, beside a cart of bread. “We’re looking into everything,” said Lt. Col. Richard Hecht, an army spokesman. So far this year, at least 59 Palestinia­ns have been killed in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, according to a tally by The Associated Press. While many of those killed in recent army raids are militants, stone- throwing youths

protesting the incursions and others not involved in confrontat­ions have also been killed.

WHY WAS THE DEATH TOLL SO HIGH?

The Israeli military said that its troops came under heavy fire as they stormed into the city. Young Palestinia­n men are increasing­ly taking up guns and organizing into small militant groups. The Israeli army’s escalating efforts to pursue them last year led to bloodshed in the West Bank at levels not seen since 2004. Fed up with the Israeli occupation that constrains their lives and disillusio­ned by the long-stalemated peace process and the unpopular Palestinia­n Authority that exercises limited control in parts of the West Bank, many young Palestinia­ns have gotten their hands on M-16s, often smuggled from Israeli army bases or neighborin­g Jordan. Instead of slinging stones at troops entering their towns, they open fire. Israeli forces fire back. During a raid into the Jenin refugee camp last month, 10 Palestinia­ns were killed, including a 61-year-old woman peering out at the chaos from her apartment window.

WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

The Islamist militant group that rules the Gaza Strip, Hamas, issued a veiled threat after the deadly raid, saying its “patience is running out.” Senior Palestinia­n official Hussein al- Sheikh said that the Palestinia­n Authority is “considerin­g taking steps at all levels in response,” without elaboratin­g. Its options are limited. After last month’s raid in Jenin, the PA suspended security coordinati­on with Israel, a move it has announced before with little impact. Although Israel says that its stepped-up arrest raids in the West Bank are intended to prevent future attacks, Palestinia­n residents and critics say the operations only inflame a ceaseless cycle of hatred and bloodshed. The Lion’s Den on Wednesday promised revenge. “The size of the pain that befell Nablus today,” it warned, “Israel will swallow twice as much.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/MAJDI MOHAMMED ?? Palestinia­ns inspect the ruins of a militant hideout destroyed during a raid by Israeli forces in the Old City of Nablus in the West Bank, on Wednesday.
AP PHOTO/MAJDI MOHAMMED Palestinia­ns inspect the ruins of a militant hideout destroyed during a raid by Israeli forces in the Old City of Nablus in the West Bank, on Wednesday.

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