Los Angeles Times

American killed in Israel attack

Stabbing of the visitor comes as a survey shows deep divisions between the country’s Jews and Arabs.

- By Kate Shuttlewor­th

JERUSALEM — An American tourist was stabbed to death in one of three attacks reportedly carried out by Palestinia­ns across Israel on Tuesday — the same day a survey was released showing almost half of Jewish Israelis support expelling Arab citizens of Israel.

The man was identified as a Vanderbilt University graduate student on a school trip to Tel Aviv.

The attack took place Tuesday evening in the port of Jaffa, near Tel Aviv, where both Jews and Palestinia­ns live. At least 10 people were injured and the suspected attacker was shot dead by police.

Police described the attacker as a 21- year- old from the West Bank refugee camp in Kalkilya.

Vanderbilt Chancellor Nicholas Zeppos said in a statement that the victim was Taylor Force, a student in the Owen Graduate School of Management at the university in Nashville.

“Taylor embarked on this trip to expand his understand­ing of global entreprene­urship and also to share his insights and knowledge with start- ups in Israel,” Zeppos said. “He exemplifie­d the spirit of discovery, learning and service that is the hallmark of our wonderful Owen community. This horrific act of violence has robbed our Vanderbilt family of a young hopeful life and all of the bright promise that he held for bettering our greater world.”

Just over an hour before the attack, three Israelis were wounded in two separate attacks within minutes of each other in Jerusalem and Petah Tikva. One Palestinia­n suspect was shot to death.

The Israeli army announced Tuesday night that it was sealing off the West Bank villages of Zawiyeh and Auja, the hometowns of two of the attackers, pre- venting anyone from leaving or entering. Israeli forces were also deployed to the East Jerusalem neighborho­od of Issawiya, where one of the attackers lived, as violence broke out there.

The attacks took place at a low point in Israeli- Palestinia­n relations, and on the day that U. S. Vice President Joe Biden arrived in Israel for talks with leaders on both sides.

They also coincided with the release of a survey by the Pew Research Center that dramatical­ly illustrate­d the divisions in Israel between Arabs and Jews and between religious and secular Jews.

The survey by the Wash- ington- based think tank found that almost half of Israeli Jews backed the transfer or expulsion of Palestinia­ns to other countries. The number of religious Jews who supported expulsion was higher, with 69% of ultra- Orthodox Jews supporting it.

The number of Palestinia­n citizens of Israel, known as Arab Israelis, who still had faith in a peaceful twostate solution had dropped, with 74% believing it possible in 2013 and only 50% in 2015. Only 43% of Jewish respondent­s believed the two sides could agree on a viable two- state solution — the goal of internatio­nal peacemakin­g efforts.

The survey included faceto- face interviews with 5,600 people and had various margins of sampling error, depending on the size of the subgroup.

Its f indings pointed to the challenges facing the United States as it continues to look for a solution to the intractabl­e bloodshed in the region and struggles to maintain civil relations with Israel.

Biden’s arrival came after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu decided to decline an invitation to meet with President Obama. The cancellati­on of Netanyahu’s expected visit to Washington, originally scheduled for later this month, came as a surprise to U. S. officials, who issued a terse statement expressing annoyance over the change of plans.

“We were surprised to first learn via media reports that the prime minister, rather than accept our invitation, opted to cancel his visit,” the White House statement said.

Netanyahu’s office later denied that he had surprised the White House and said he called off the trip to avoid becoming entangled in the heated politics of the U. S. presidenti­al election. Many Democrats accused Netanyahu of meddling in U. S. affairs last year when he lobbied against the nuclear agreement between Iran and a group of internatio­nal powers led by the United States.

Most of the discussion between Biden and Israeli leaders is expected to center on Israeli hopes that the United States will increase funding of a new, 10- year military aid package from the current $ 3 billion a year. Israel is seeking an additional $ 1 billion a year; the Obama administra­tion is reported to be offering an additional $ 500 million a year.

There is little hope that Biden’s visit will lead to any efforts to reinvigora­te the peace process between Israelis and Palestinia­ns. The violence Tuesday made it one of the bloodiest days in a f ive- month wave that has left 33 Israelis and nearly 200 Palestinia­ns dead.

In the attack involving the American, police said a man stabbed three people near the Jaffa port, ran toward Tel Aviv stabbing another three people, then stabbed four more farther along the beachfront promenade, not far from a nowshutter­ed nightclub where a Palestinia­n suicide bomber killed 25 people in 2001.

Seven of the people injured in the attack were being treated in Ichilov Hospital in Tel Aviv, one of them in critical condition and three in moderate condition. The hospital said that one of the victims was a pregnant woman and that one was an Arab Israeli.

Israeli police said two police personnel were wounded, one critically, in a shooting attack near the Damascus Gate, which leads into the Old City of Jerusalem. The Palestinia­n suspect was shot dead.

Another Israeli was wounded in a stabbing attack in Petah Tikva.

Shuttlewor­th is a special correspond­ent.

 ?? Ji m Hollander
European Pressphoto Agency ?? MEMBERS OF an ultra- Orthodox Jewish burial society clean up the scene of the stabbing in Jaffa, Israel. The victim was identif ied as U. S. student Taylor Force.
Ji m Hollander European Pressphoto Agency MEMBERS OF an ultra- Orthodox Jewish burial society clean up the scene of the stabbing in Jaffa, Israel. The victim was identif ied as U. S. student Taylor Force.

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