Israeli drones strike West Bank in major operation
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[July 03, 2023]
By Ali Sawafta
JENIN, West Bank (Reuters) -Israeli forces hit the city of Jenin with
drone strikes during an overnight operation on Monday that included
hundreds of troops and set off a gunbattle lasting into the day, killing
at least seven people in a major escalation of West Bank violence.
With drones clearly audible overhead and the sounds of gunfire and
explosives heard across the city hours after the strikes, the Jenin
Brigades, a unit made up of militant groups based in the city's crowded
refugee camp, said it was engaging the Israeli forces and shot down one
of the unmanned aircraft.
At times during the morning, at least six drones could be seen circling
over the city and the adjoining camp, a densely packed area housing
around 14,000 refugees in less than half a square kilometre.
The camp has been at the heart of an escalating spiral of violence
across the West Bank that has triggered mounting alarm from Washington
to the Arab world, without so far opening the way to a resumption of
political negotiations that have been stalled for almost a decade.
For more than a year, army raids in cities like Jenin have become
routine, while there have been a series of deadly attacks by
Palestinians against Israelis and rampages by Jewish settler mobs
against Palestinian villages.
"What is going on in the refugee camp is real war," said Palestinian
ambulance driver, Khaled Alahmad, describing Monday's fighting. "There
were strikes from the sky targeting the camp, every time we drive in,
around five to seven ambulances and we come back full with injured
people."
The Palestinian health ministry confirmed at least seven people had been
killed and 27 wounded in Jenin, while another man was killed in the city
of Ramallah after being shot in the head at a checkpoint.
The Israeli military said its forces struck a building that served as a
command centre for fighters from the Jenin Brigades in what it described
as an extensive counterterrorism effort aimed at destroying
infrastructure and disrupting militants from using the refugee camp as a
base.
A spokesman said it would last as long as needed and officials suggested
forces could remain for days. "An operation doesn't end in one day,"
Energy Minister Israel Katz, a member of the security cabinet, told Army
radio.
Until June 21, when it carried out a strike near Jenin, the Israeli
military had not used drone strikes in the West Bank since 2006. But the
growing scale of the violence and the pressure on ground forces meant
such tactics may continue, a military spokesman said.
"We're really stretched," he told journalists. "It's because of the
scale. And again, from our perception, this will minimize friction," he
said, saying the strikes were based on "precise intelligence".
Hundreds of fighters from militant groups including Hamas, Islamic Jihad
and Fatah are based in the camp, armed with an array of weapons smuggled
into the West Bank or stolen from Israeli forces, and a growing arsenal
of explosive devices.
Israeli forces said they seized an improvised rocket launcher and hit a
weapons production and explosives storage facility.
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An injured man is transported on a
stretcher after a Palestinian was killed during an Israeli military
operation, at a hospital in Jenin, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank
July 3, 2023. REUTERS/Raneen Sawafta
'HORNETS NEST'
Monday's operation, involving a force described as "brigade-size" -
suggesting around 1,000-2,000 troops - was intended to help "break
the safe haven mindset of the camp, which has become a hornets
nest," the spokesman said.
Its apparent scale underlined the importance of the Jenin camp in
violence that has further exposed the impotence of the Palestinian
Authority to impose its writ over towns in the West Bank, where it
holds nominal governance powers.
But it was unclear whether the incursion would trigger a wider
response from Palestinian factions, drawing in militant groups in
the Gaza Strip, the coastal enclave controlled by the militant
Islamist group Hamas.
"The resistance will confront the enemy and defend the Palestinian
people and all options are open to strike the enemy and respond to
its aggression on Jenin," said a statement from the Iranian-backed
Islamic Jihad group in Gaza.
Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said his forces were "closely
monitoring the conduct of our enemies.
"The defence establishment is ready for all scenarios."
Following the last major raid in Jenin in June, Palestinian gunmen
killed four Israelis near a Jewish settlement in the West Bank in an
attack that led to a rampage by mobs of settlers in Palestinian
villages and towns.
As daylight broke on Monday, thick black smoke from burning tyres
set alight by residents swirled through the Jenin streets while
calls to support the fighters rang out from loudspeakers in mosques.
A spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas called the
operation "a new war crime against our defenceless people."
The Israeli military, which regularly accuses militant groups of
basing fighters in civilian areas, said the targeted building
functioned as an "advanced observation and reconnaissance centre"
and a weapons and explosives site as well as a coordination and
communications hub.
It provided an aerial photograph showing what it said was the target
and which indicated the building hit was near two schools and a
medical centre.
Israel captured the West Bank, which the Palestinians see as the
core of a future independent state, along with East Jerusalem and
Gaza, in the 1967 Middle Eastern war. Following decades of conflict,
peace talks that had been brokered by the United States have been
frozen since 2014.
(Additional reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza, James Mackenzie,
Dan Williams, Maayan Lubell in Jerusalem; Writing by James
Mackenzie; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Frank Jack Daniel)
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