The Boston Globe

Attack by Palestinia­n gunmen ignites Israeli vigilante anger

Violent settlers set multiple fires

- By Patrick Kingsley

JERUSALEM — Israeli extremists caused widespread damage in a wave of attacks on Palestinia­n towns that lasted from Tuesday night until Wednesday night in revenge for the killing of four Israelis by Palestinia­n gunmen outside a nearby settlement in the territory.

Scores of Israeli arsonists entered the Palestinia­n communitie­s closest to the site of the shooting, setting fires that damaged dozens of cars and buildings and spurring confrontat­ions with Palestinia­n villagers. At least one Palestinia­n was shot and killed, and 12 others were injured, some of them in clashes with the Israeli security forces, according to the Palestinia­n health ministry.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the settler attacks unacceptab­le, saying: “The State of Israel is a state of law. The citizens of Israel are all obligated to respect the law.”

But Netanyahu also attempted to assuage hard-line allies in his far-right government by announcing that he would immediatel­y advance plans to build 1,000 more homes in Eli, the settlement in the West Bank close to the attack Tuesday by Palestinia­n gunmen.

Netanyahu said the decision, which will require further government approvals before constructi­on begins, was a direct response to the attack. Two fighters from Hamas, the Islamist militia that controls the Gaza Strip, killed four Israeli civilians at a restaurant and gas station next to Eli before being killed themselves.

“Our answer to terrorism is to strike at it forcefully and build up our country,” Netanyahu said in a statement that was also issued on behalf of his defense minister, Yoav Gallant, and finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, a far-right former settler activist.

The Israeli military later conducted a rare drone strike in the northern West Bank on a car that it said was carrying a group of militants. Experts said the attack was one of the first aerial strikes on militants in the territory since the second intifada, or Palestinia­n uprising, in the 2000s.

Netanyahu’s response highlighte­d the tension between his efforts to please pro-settler figures in his governing coalition — the most nationalis­t and socially conservati­ve in Israeli history — and his simultaneo­us goal of strengthen­ing Israel’s new diplomatic ties with Arab government­s, which oppose Netanyahu’s approach to the Palestinia­ns.

Netanyahu’s settlement plan won praise from right-wing coalition partners, many of whom want him to exert greater control over the West Bank. Some of them have previously excused settler violence, which they see as a legitimate response to Palestinia­n attacks.

But Netanyahu’s response is likely to worsen Israel’s relations in the Arab world, where leaders want him to reduce tensions in the West Bank and had already expressed anger this week at an earlier Israeli decision to expand and expedite settlement constructi­on.

This week, Morocco postponed a long-awaited diplomatic summit with Israel in protest of Netanyahu’s settlement policy, diplomats from Israel and other countries said Wednesday.

Like Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates, Morocco signed a landmark diplomatic agreement with Israel in 2020, ending years of diplomatic isolation for Israel in the region — and the assumption that Israel and Arab government­s would not be able to make peace until there was a resolution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict.

But while the three Arab countries have since hosted Israeli ministers and increased military cooperatio­n with Israel’s government, they appear ambivalent about further deepening ties while Netanyahu’s administra­tion continues its hardline approach to the Palestinia­ns.

Similar concerns are expected to slow Netanyahu’s efforts to form formal ties with Saudi Arabia, despite a major push by the Biden administra­tion to forge such a deal.

The arson Wednesday was centered in the village of Turmusayya, a frequent target of settler reprisals where many Palestinia­n residents also hold US citizenshi­p. In interviews broadcast by the Palestinia­n news media, one resident said that her home had been set on fire while children were still inside. Residents called on the US ambassador in Jerusalem, Thomas Nides, to inspect the damage in person.

Palestinia­n outlets reported that at least nine other Palestinia­n villages were attacked by settlers who smashed shop windows, threw stones and assaulted Palestinia­ns, and fired bullets at them.

Palestinia­ns accused the Israeli security forces of standing by as the settlers attacked and even engaging in some of the violence itself.

In a statement, the Israeli police acknowledg­ed shooting one Palestinia­n but said that its officers had opened fire only after Palestinia­n rioters disrupted efforts to put out fires. The Israeli military said it had acted to prevent clashes between Israelis and Palestinia­ns.

 ?? AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A man walked around burned out cars, reportedly set ablaze by Israeli settlers, in the area of in Al-Lubban Al-Gharbi in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday.
AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A man walked around burned out cars, reportedly set ablaze by Israeli settlers, in the area of in Al-Lubban Al-Gharbi in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday.

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