What can we expect from the Israel Defense Forces’ current operation in Jenin?
According to the IDF, the goal of the
operation is to disable the massive terror infrastructure that
Palestinian groups have built in the Jenin refugee camp.
Over the past year-and-a-half, due to the
policies of the previous government and to IDF support for those
policies, the area has become a mini-Gaza. In September 2021, in
conjunction with then-Defense Minister Benny Gantz, Central Command head
Maj. Gen. Yehuda Fuchs ordered a five-month moratorium on IDF
operations in Jenin, in the interest of “strengthening the Palestinian
Authority.”
The current operation then is geared
towards repairing the damage caused by the policies of the previous
government and Central Command. As IDF Spokesman R. Adm. Daniel Hagari
explained Monday morning in a spate of television and radio interviews,
the purpose of the operation is not to seize control over Jenin or parts
of the city. It is not directed against the P.A. It is meant simply to
regain the tactical advantage and degrade the capabilities of the terror
groups operating in the refugee camp.
As a limited, tactical engagement, the
operation has limited, but important, potential. Over the past several
weeks, the Palestinians have shot four rudimentary rockets at Israeli
communities from Jenin. Although military experts insist these were mere
pop guns, the missile industry in Gaza began the same way in 2000.
Today, missiles from Gaza have ranges that cover most of the country.
The operation in Jenin can destroy all the rocket workshops and kill or
arrest all of the terrorist operatives engaged in the development of the
rocket program.
The operation in Jenin can also disrupt
and degrade the Palestinian terror capacity by killing and capturing the
terror commanders and foot soldiers who together have been carrying out
shooting, stoning, roadside bomb and pipe bomb attacks against Israelis
throughout the region. These attacks have made life a crap shoot for
tens of thousands of Israeli citizens who live and work in the
communities in northern Samaria and the Binyamin region.
In the hours before the operation in Jenin
began, Palestinian terrorists carried out four shooting attacks against
Israeli vehicles, communities and IDF personnel in the area around the
city. To get a sense of the magnitude of the problem, every day
Palestinians from Jenin and the wider area carry out hundreds of stoning
attacks against Israeli vehicles on the roads. And according to the
Shin Bet, in May alone, Palestinians attacked Israeli vehicles with
Molotov cocktails 139 times. They carried out 51 pipe bomb attacks and
11 shooting attacks.
While some of the terror infrastructure
behind these attacks is located in Nablus, and in villages like Huwara
and Umm Tzafa, because of the free rein terror groups enjoy in Jenin,
the bulk of the operational infrastructure is located in Jenin.
Strategic problem
The fact that the current operation is a
tactical engagement doesn’t mean that the problem isn’t strategic. It
is. But unfortunately, the IDF doesn’t share the Netanyahu government’s
understanding of the strategic realities on the ground. And as a result,
a wider operation is unlikely.
This disparity was exposed Sunday by an
in-depth study of Maj. Gen. Yehuda Fuchs and his ideological assessment
of the region published by Hakol Hayehudi news service. The
report included an interview with a top officer in Central Command. In a
remarkable exchange, journalist Elchanan Groner asked the unnamed top
officer whether the Palestinian Authority is Israel’s enemy.
“Absolutely not. The Palestinians are not
an enemy and the P.A. is not an enemy and really doesn’t encourage
terrorism,” the top officer said.
The statement by the top officer was
jaw-dropping. As Palestinian Media Watch reported last week, Fatah, the
PLO faction led by P.A. chairman Mahmoud Abbas, bragged in its official
media organs last week that U.S.-trained P.A. security personnel carry
out two-thirds of all terrorist attacks against Israel.
The P.A. devotes 7% of its U.S.-funded
budget to paying salaries to terrorists imprisoned in Israeli jails and
pensions to the families of dead terrorists. These salaries rise with
the severity of the crimes. The base salary is NIS 1,400 a month for
rock throwers. Terrorists receive extra money if they murder Jews and
the more Jews they murder, the more money they make. On average, the
salary of terrorists is three times the average income in P.A.-ruled
areas. Yet, the top Central Command officer insisted that the P.A.
opposes terrorism.
In his words, “The P.A. views it as a
failure when a member of their security forces shoots Israelis. They
handle it and put him in jail. I absolutely do not define them as an
enemy.”
He added, “It’s possible that a day will
come where they embark on another path, and then we’ll define them as an
enemy. Abu Mazen [aka Abbas] doesn’t love us, but he opposes terrorism.
He is terrible to us in the international arena. But he opposes
terrorism.”
Although he admitted that the P.A. pays
salaries to terrorists, and that the policy is “a problematic story that
is liable to encourage terrorism,” he insisted that it is “very
complicated.”
Central Command
Rather than focus on the P.A.’s role in
the violence, in recent weeks, top Central Command officers have been
focusing their ire on the Jews in the region. The day before the current
operation in Jenin, Channel 11 reported that the IDF, Shin Bet and police are forming a joint unit to quell “settler violence.”
The move followed a series of actions
against Israeli Jews in the region capped off last week with Defense
Minister Yoav Gallant’s order to place four Israeli Jews under
administrative detention for six months despite the absence of evidence
of wrongdoing by them. A magistrate’s court judge, citing the absence of
incriminating evidence, ordered the four released from jail last week.
The current IDF onslaught against Israeli
residents of the region came after last Saturday, when hundreds of area
residents entered Umm Tzafa and set fire to Palestinian homes. The
media, the Biden administration and the IDF all zoned in on the
incident, using it to buttress the narrative that “settler violence” is
the propellant driving Palestinian terrorism. That is, the presence of
Jews in northern Samaria and the Binyamin region is the “root cause” of
Palestinian terrorism.
Last Friday, Maariv journalist
Kalman Liebskind exposed the full picture, which is quite different from
the narrative that has taken hold. Last Monday, terrorists from the
Palestinian village of Urif in the Binyamin region massacred four Jews
dining in a restaurant in the neighboring Jewish village of Eli. In the
days following the massacre, Palestinians from the neighboring village
of Umm Tzafa carried out continuous assaults on Jewish vehicles
traveling on Route 465.
Rather than enter Umm Tzafa and round up
the hundreds of villagers attacking the Israeli motorists with rocks and
boulders, the IDF shut down Route 465 to Israeli traffic for several
hours on Thursday and again on Friday morning.
On Saturday, a cowherd from the region was
attacked by hundreds of Palestinians from Umm Tzafa. When the IDF
failed to deploy forces to protect him from the hundreds of Palestinians
attacking him and his cows with fireworks and rocks, he called the
residents in the surrounding villages, who broke the Sabbath
restrictions to save him. Rather than thank the Jewish villagers, the
IDF joined Peace Now and other leftist and anarchist groups in
castigating them as violent
thugs for brandishing their weapons to protect the cowherd.
Later that evening, still raging from the
attempted murder of their friend just days after four of their friends
were murdered at Eli, dozens of area residents entered Umm Tzafa and
carried out their arson attacks. While deserving of condemnation and
criminal, the arson rampage looks a lot different when seen in the
context of events, including the IDF’s inaction.
This is the heart of the problem. While
the immediate cause of the expansion of the terrorist infrastructure in
Jenin was Fuchs’s stand-down order in September 2021, the deeper reason
Jenin has become a mini-Gaza is rooted in Israel’s disastrous 2005
withdrawal from northern Samaria. At the time, believing that the P.A.
would behave responsibly and quell the terror groups operating in the
region, the Sharon government ordered the destruction of four Israeli
communities and the withdrawal of the IDF from its brigade headquarters
in the area.
In the event, depending on whom you talk
to, the P.A. either lost control over the region and Iranian-backed
terror groups took over, or, according to Fatah, the P.A. has led the
Iranian-backed terror groups in their transformation of the region into a
second Gaza Strip.
Recognizing that the 2005 withdrawal,
rather than “settler violence,” forms the root of the present crisis, in
March the coalition repealed the 2005 Disengagement Law in relation to
northern Samaria. The move was the first step towards enabling the
repopulation of the destroyed communities, beginning with Homesh, where
the government approved the operation of a yeshiva.
Presumably,
the move also presages the return of the Menashe Territorial
Brigade (also known as the Jenin Brigade) to its original position.
Since Israel has not applied its law to
Judea and Samaria, for the Knesset’s action to go into effect, Gen.
Fuchs must sign an administrative order. To date, Fuchs has refused to
sign the order. By so acting, Fuchs actively subverts and prevents the
government from implementing its strategic vision for northern Samaria.
Empty suit
To be sure, Netanyahu said this week that
he opposes any effort to dismantle the P.A. But it is not at all clear
that the decision is Israel’s to make. As Arab affairs commentator
Baruch Yedid reported on Monday morning, a recent poll showed that 50%
of Palestinians believe it is their national interest to dismantle the
P.A. Sixty-three percent want Abbas to resign. Seventy-one percent
support the terror groups operating in northern Samaria.
Beyond that, the term “Palestinian
Authority” is an empty suit. The question is who fills it and what he
does. The Netanyahu government does not view the P.A. as presently
constituted as a positive force or one interested in fighting terrorism.
And given its personnel’s leading role in terrorism, the government’s
view is grounded in reality.
From the top officer’s statements to Hakol Hayehudi,
and from statements by Fuchs and IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi
Halevi, it is apparent that the IDF’s strategic vision for the region is
far different. It is more aligned with the Biden administration’s
policies than with the Netanyahu government’s policies. Like the
administration, the IDF’s top leadership views the Jewish communities in
the region as obstacles to security and the P.A. as the preferred
partner for fighting Palestinian terrorism.
What this means is that the limited,
tactical operation in Jenin the IDF is currently undertaking is the best
that we can expect to receive in Judea and Samaria for now. So long as
Fuchs remains the commanding officer, and so long as the IDF General
Staff refuses to accept strategic realities unaligned with its
leadership’s ideological convictions, there is unlikely to be any
positive strategic shift in the reality on the ground.
1 comment:
I wonder if those M-16s are Afghanistan left-overs?
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