Since the end of the Second Intifada in 2005, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict had been largely smoldered, that was until October 7. Hamas had launched small-scale wars from the Gaza Strip, and Palestinian armed groups and individuals had carried out terrorist attacks in the West Bank and in Israel, prompting stringent Israeli military responses. Last year, however, showed an increase in a distinct type of hostility accompanied by a deadly rise of violence among Palestinians and Israelis in the West Bank.

In June 2023, dozens of settlers (Israeli civilians living beyond the 1967 Green Line) entered and attacked the Palestinian town of Turmus Ayya. Some 30 houses and 60 cars were burned. Then there was the Palestinian terror attack in the Eli settlement, which claimed the lives of four Israelis. Following the attack, roughly 20 settlers set cars on fire in the Palestinian village of Hawara.

As the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza rages on and the threat of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s “ring of fire” looms ever larger, recent weeks have witnessed a troubling resurgence of this violence in the West Bank. In the village of Wadi Rahhal, Israeli settlers opened fire, killing a Palestinian man and wounding three others. Simultaneously, a Hamas operative – recently freed in the November hostage deal – was eliminated by the IDF in Nur Shams after allegedly resuming terrorist activities. Four Jewish Israeli suspects were arrested for their involvement in a brutal assault on the Palestinian village of Jit, while a Palestinian gunman claimed the life of an Israeli civilian in a drive-by shooting. These events are not isolated; they’re part of a particular violence that seems increasingly entrenched.

Read More