Sunday, March 5, 2023

In West Bank, New Armed Groups Emerge, and Dormant Ones Stir

In West Bank, New Armed Groups Emerge, and Dormant Ones Stir
DNYUZ



After a violent uprising by Palestinians against Israel subsided nearly two decades ago, Abu Abdallah, then a leader of a Palestinian militia, stashed away his assault rifle and later became a civil servant in the West Bank city of Nablus.

When Israeli troops raided Nablus late last month, Abu Abdallah, now 42, lent that rifle to a group of Palestinian gunmen 20 years younger who were locked in a four-hour gun battle with the soldiers in the Palestinian city. That made him a party to the conflict for the first time in years — one of several former fighters who returned to the fray that day, he said.

“We have this feeling that we need to do our duty,” said Abu Abdallah, who asked to be identified by his nom de guerre in order to avoid legal repercussions.

For years, the Palestinian Authority, the semiautonomous body that administers cities in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, like Nablus, worked with Israel to keep Palestinian militias in relative check. The authority had hoped that building enough trust with Israeli leaders would persuade them to allow the formation of a Palestinian state.

But in cities like Nablus, the authority’s control is ebbing and its popularity is plummeting as hopes of statehood all but evaporate. A younger generation of gunmen has become increasingly active over the past year, mounting more shooting attacks on Israeli soldiersand civilians, and opening fire far more often during Israeli raids on their towns.


Foremost among them is a new group called the Lions’ Den, the target of the Israeli raid in Nablus last month, whose support is growing even as its ranks dwindle through killings and arrests. Long-dormant fighters like Abu Abdallah are also stirring, spurred into action in part by the younger gunmen.


In the Old City of Nablus, a warren of alleys, Ottoman-era mosques and covered markets that has long been a stronghold for Palestinian gunmen, three young fighters said this past week in interviews with the The New York Times that they believed they had begun a new widespread insurgency, 18 years after the last one ended.


That sentiment explains in part why deadly violence in the West Bank has risen so sharply in 2023 and why polling shows that both Palestinians and Israeli Jews feel the region is on the cusp of an intifada, or a Palestinian national uprising, for the first time since the last one subsided in 2005.

Palestinian violence began rising last spring, under the previous Israeli government. Israel’s new far-right government took office late last year and began stepping up its response to recent attacks by Palestinian fighters. This past week, one cabinet minister issued a call to “wipe out” a Palestinian town at the center of recent turmoil.

The Lions’ Den group in Nablus has been responsible for much of the rise in Palestinian violence. In 2022, there were 61 shooting attacks, one of them deadly, on Israeli soldiers and civilians in and around the city, up from only three attacks in 2020, according to Israeli military records.

These attacks have prompted an increasingly forceful and even erratic Israeli military campaign. More than 60 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank so far this year, the deadliest start to any year this century in the territory, according to Palestinian officials. Most died during gun battles between Israeli security forces and Palestinian gunmen started by Israeli operations to arrest people suspected of involvement in carrying out or plotting attacks against Israeli soldiers and civilians.

For many, the question now is whether Palestinians are about to start another violent intifada — a societywide effort to fight the occupation. The first intifada, in the 1980s, was defined mainly by protests and violent riots. The second, in the 2000s, also began with protests and riots, but soon devolved into terrorist attacks and Israeli military raids, leaving 1,000 Israelis and 3,000 Palestinians dead — and much of central Nablus in ruins.

Two decades on, signs of social support for violent resistance — and, in particular, the Lions’ Den — are found across Nablus. Many residents have placed photographs of slain Lions’ Den members on amulets hanging in the city’s main square. Songs about the group play in cafes. And their faces are seen on shop fronts, car windows and cellphone screens.


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