Israel sends tanks into West Bank for first time in decades, says
fleeing Palestinians can't return
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[February 24, 2025]
By MAJDI MOHAMMED and TIA GOLDENBERG
JENIN, West Bank (AP) — Israeli tanks moved into the occupied West Bank
on Sunday for the first time in decades in what Palestinian authorities
called a “dangerous escalation,” after the defense minister said troops
will remain in parts of the territory for a year and tens of thousands
of Palestinians who have fled cannot return.
Associated Press journalists saw several tanks move along unpaved tracks
into Jenin, long a bastion of armed struggle against Israel.
Israel is deepening its crackdown on the Palestinian territory and has
said it is determined to stamp out militancy amid a rise in attacks. It
launched the offensive in the northern West Bank on Jan. 21 — two days
after the current ceasefire in Gaza took hold — and expanded it to
nearby areas.
Palestinians view the deadly raids as part of an effort to cement
Israeli control over the territory, where 3 million Palestinians live
under military rule.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said he and Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu ordered the military to “increase the intensity of
the activity to thwart terrorism" in all refugee camps in the West Bank.
“We will not allow the return of residents, and we will not allow
terrorism to return and grow,” he said.
Earlier, Katz said he had instructed the military to prepare for “an
extended stay” in some of the West Bank's urban refugee camps from which
about 40,000 Palestinians have fled, leaving them “emptied of
residents.”

The camps are home to descendants of Palestinians who fled during wars
with Israel decades ago. It was not clear how long Palestinians would be
prevented from returning. Katz said Israeli troops would stay “for the
coming year.” Netanyahu said they would stay “as long as needed."
Tanks were last deployed in the West Bank in 2002, when Israel fought a
deadly Palestinian uprising.
The Palestinian foreign ministry called the Israeli moves “a dangerous
escalation of the situation in the West Bank,” and urged the
international community to intervene in what it termed Israel's illegal
“aggression.”
“Even if they stay, we will return to the camp at the end,” said Mohamed
al-Sadi, one of those displaced from Jenin. “This camp is ours. We have
no other place to go.”
Netanyahu under pressure to crack down
With fighting in Gaza and Lebanon on hold, Netanyahu has been under
pressure from far-right governing partners to crack down on militancy in
the West Bank. The U.N. says the current Israeli military operation is
the longest since the Palestinian uprising of the early 2000s.
Under interim peace agreements from the early 1990s, Israel maintains
control over large parts of the West Bank, while the Palestinian
Authority administers other areas. Israel regularly sends troops into
Palestinian zones but typically withdraws them after missions.
More than 800 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank since the
war in Gaza erupted on Oct. 7, 2023, with a Hamas attack on southern
Israel. Israel says most were militants, but stone-throwing youths
protesting Israeli raids as well as bystanders have also been killed. In
the most recent operation, a pregnant Palestinian woman was killed.
Jewish settlers also have carried out rampages in Palestinian areas in
the territory. And there has been a spike in Palestinian attacks
emanating from the West Bank. On Thursday, blasts rocked three empty
buses in Israel in what police view as a suspected militant attack.
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Israeli tanks moving into the Palestinians city of Jenin in the
occupied West Bank, Sunday, Feb. 23, 2025. (AP Photo/Majdi Mohammed)

Israel captured the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem in the 1967
Mideast war. Palestinians want all three territories for their
future independent state.
U.S. envoy to pursue extended ceasefire
The truce between Israel and Hamas in Gaza remains tenuous.
A week is left in the ceasefire’s first phase, and no negotiations
have been reported on the second phase. The truce’s collapse could
lead to renewed fighting in Gaza, where Netanyahu says 63 hostages
remain, about half of them believed dead, including a soldier
captured in 2014.
“We are ready to return to intense fighting at any moment,"
Netanyahu said Sunday. The military increased its “operational
readiness” around Gaza.
The U.S. special envoy for the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, told CNN
he expects the second phase to go forward, adding: “We have to get
an extension of phase one and so I’ll be going into the region this
week, probably Wednesday, to negotiate that.” He told CBS he will
visit Qatar, Egypt, Israel, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi
Arabia.
But a senior Hamas leader, Mahmoud Mardawi, said Sunday the group
will not engage in further discussions with Israel through mediators
until Israel releases the 620 Palestinian prisoners meant to be
freed on Saturday.
Israel said early Sunday it was delaying the release until it gets
assurances that Hamas stops what Israel calls “humiliating”
handovers of hostages in staged ceremonies criticized by the U.S.
and Red Cross as cruel.
Egypt and Qatar were pressing Israel to release the prisoners, and
Egypt refused to discuss any Israeli demands before then, said an
Egyptian official involved in the talks who spoke on condition of
anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to talk to the media.
Palestinian family members were distraught. “What have the prisoners
done? We don’t know what happened. They killed our joy,” said one
mother, Najah Zaqqot.
The White House is supporting Israel’s decision to delay releasing
the Palestinians prisoners, calling it “appropriate.”
National Security Council spokesman Brian Hughes said Sunday that,
“given Hamas’ barbaric treatment of the hostages, including the
hideous parade of the Bibas children’s coffins through the streets
of Gaza, Israel’s decision to delay the release of prisoners is an
appropriate response.”

“The President is prepared to support Israel in whatever course of
action it chooses regarding Hamas,” Hughes said in a statement.
Meanwhile, Netanyahu faced new criticism over the war while speaking
at a military graduation. As he held up a picture of Shiri Bibas and
her young boys, Ariel and Kfir, whose remains were returned from
Gaza last week, to demonstrate “what we are fighting against,”
audience members called out “Shame!” and “Why didn’t you save them?”
The prime minister didn’t react.
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Goldenberg reported from Tel Aviv, Israel. Associated Press writer
Samy Magdy in Cairo contributed.
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