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{{pp-30-500|small=yes}}
{{Infobox terrorist attack {{Infobox terrorist attack
|title=August 2010 West Bank shooting | title = August 2010 West Bank shooting attack
| partof = the ]
|image=
| map = {{location map|Israel south wb|lat_deg=31|lat_min=32|lat_sec=08|lon_deg=35|lon_min=07|lon_sec=05|caption=The location of Kiryat Arba, West Bank}}
|caption=
|location=], ]<br />near ] | image =
| caption =
| location = ], ]<br />near ]
| target = <!--CITE the target otherwise its POV, OR and Synthesis-->
|target=]i motorists
|date=August 31, 2010 | date = {{start date|2010|8|31}}
| coordinates = {{Coord|31.5421|35.1307|region:PS_type:event|display=it}}
|time-begin=
|time-end= | time-begin =
| time-end =
|timezone= | timezone =
|type=] | type = ]
|fatalities=4 | fatalities = 4 civilians
|injuries=0
|perps=] | perps =
| perpetrator = ]
}} }}
The 31 '''August 2010 ] shooting''' was a ] near ]. Four Israelis were killed after ] members attacked their vehicle,<ref name=Katz> Yaakov Katz and Yaakov Lappin, 31 August 2010, Jerusalem Pst.</ref> making it the deadliest Palestinian attack on Israelis in over two years.<ref name=Levinson/><ref name=MFA> Ministry of Foreigh Affairs, Israel.</ref>


The '''August 2010 West Bank shooting attack''' was an attack near the ] of ] in the ], carried out by ] militants. Four Israeli settlers from the settlements of ] and ] were killed after militants attacked their vehicle.<ref name=Katz> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130127090255/http://www.jpost.com/Israel/Article.aspx?id=186614 |date=January 27, 2013 }} Yaakov Katz and Yaakov Lappin, 31 August 2010, Jerusalem Pst.</ref><ref name=MFA> Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Israel.</ref> It was the deadliest ] attack on Israelis in over two years.<ref name=MFA/><ref name=Levinson/>
Hamas hailed the attack as "heroic" and promised further attempts to kill "illegal settlers" in the West Bank.<ref name=promise /> Hamas supporters in ] publicly celebrated the killings. The attack was condemned by the ], Israel and the ]. The assailants were arrested by the Palestinian Authority but promptly released after Hamas accused the authority of treason.


Hamas hailed the attack as "heroic" and promised further attempts to kill "illegal settlers" in the West Bank.<ref name=promise /> Hamas supporters in ] publicly celebrated the killings. The attack was condemned by the ], ] and the ].
==Attack==
A couple and two additional people hitching a ride were driving on ] close to the settlement of ]. Near the entrance of the settlement, Hamas gunman began firing on the vehicle, killing the driver and forcing the car off the road. According to witnesses, the attackers then "approached the car" and shot the occupants in their seats at "close range."


The assailants were arrested by the Palestinian Authority but promptly released after Hamas accused the authority of treason. On 8 October, Israel arrested militants connected with the attack in a raid in which two Hamas operatives were killed.
The police believe that gunmen in the Palestinian drive-by shooting opened fire from a vehicle driving alongside the victim's car.<ref name=Pfeffer/> A paramedic with ] described the scene to a journalist, saying that he saw "a car that was pierced with dozens of bullets and inside there were four bodies. There was absolutely no chance of helping."<ref name=Pfeffer/> The shooting took place in two phases, an initial attack, and a second shooting of the victims at close range after their car was stopped.<ref name=Jpoststaff/>

==The attack==
A couple and two additional people hitching a ride were driving on ] close to the settlement of ]. Near the entrance of the settlement, Hamas militants began firing on the vehicle, killing the driver and forcing the car off the road. According to witnesses, the attackers then approached the car and shot the occupants in their seats at close range.

The police believe that militants in the Palestinian drive-by shooting opened fire from a vehicle driving alongside the victim's car.<ref name=Pfeffer/> A paramedic with ] described the scene to a journalist, saying that he saw "a car that was pierced with dozens of bullets and inside there were four bodies. There was absolutely no chance of helping."<ref name=Pfeffer/>


===Arrests=== ===Arrests===
Hamas declared the arrest of the attackers by the ] "treason."<ref name=AgenceFrance> Sep 7, 2010, AFP.</ref> All of the arrested suspects were "quickly" released, reminding the editorial staff of the Washington Post of "Palestinian leader ]'s duplicitous response to acts of terrorism."<ref name=excathedraeditorial/> Hamas declared the arrest of the attackers by the ] "treason."<ref name=AgenceFrance> Sep 7, 2010, AFP.</ref> All of the arrested suspects were "quickly" released, reminding the editorial staff of '']'' of "Palestinian leader ]'s duplicitous response to acts of terrorism."<ref name=excathedraeditorial/>


==Victims== ==Victims==
One of the murdered couples was from a settlement of ] in ]. Their names were Yitzhak and Tali Ames, ages 45 and 47. They were the parents of 6 children, ranging in age form 5 to 24, and of 1 grandchild.<ref name=Pfeffer> Anshel Pfeffer, Chaim Levinson, Jonathan Lis, Avi Issacharoff and Amos Harel, September 1, 2010, Ha'aretz.</ref> Tali was 9 months ] at the time of her death.<ref name="globe">{{cite web|url=http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2010/09/05/victims_on_the_road_to_peace/ |title=Victims on the road to ‘peace’ - The Boston Globe |publisher=Boston.com |date=September 5, 2010 |accessdate=October 1, 2010}}</ref> One of the murdered couples was from a settlement of ] in ]. Their names were Yitzhak and Tali Aymes, ages 45 and 47. They were the parents of 6 children, ranging in age from 5 to 24, and of 1 grandchild.<ref name=Pfeffer> Anshel Pfeffer, Chaim Levinson, Jonathan Lis, Avi Issacharoff and Amos Harel, September 1, 2010, Ha'aretz.</ref> Tali was 9 months ] at the time of her death.<ref name="globe">{{cite web|url=http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2010/09/05/victims_on_the_road_to_peace/ |title=Victims on the road to 'peace' - The Boston Globe |publisher=Boston.com |date=September 5, 2010 |accessdate=October 1, 2010| archiveurl= https://archive.today/20100907012455/http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2010/09/05/victims_on_the_road_to_peace/| archivedate= 7 September 2010 <!--DASHBot-->| url-status= live}}</ref>
] became guardians of the six Aymes ]s (besides caring for six children and two foster children of their own).<ref>{{cite news|last1=Ghert-Zand|first1=Renee|title=Yehudah Glick 'was a marked person,' father says |url=http://www.timesofisrael.com/yehudah-glick-was-a-marked-person-father-says/|accessdate=2 November 2014|publisher=Times of Israel|date=2 November 2014}}</ref>


Kochava Even Chaim, a teacher in Efrat with an eight-year-old daughter, was killed. Her husband, was among the paramedics who responded to the shooting, to discover that his wife was among the victims.<ref name=MFA> Ministry of Foreigh Affairs, Israel.</ref> Kochava Even Chaim, a teacher in Efrat with an eight-year-old daughter, was killed. Her husband was among the paramedics who responded to the shooting and discovered that one of the victims was his wife.<ref name="MFA"/>


The fourth victim was Avishai Shindler, who had recently moved with his wife to live in ].<ref name=MFA/> The fourth victim was Avishai Shindler, who had recently moved with his wife to live in ].<ref name=MFA/>
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==Reactions== ==Reactions==

===Hamas=== ===Hamas===
Abu Ubaida, spokesman for the ], claimed "full responsibility" for the attack and described it as a "heroic operation."<ref name=Pfeffer/><ref name=Bader> Hazem Bader, Sept. 1, 2010, AFP.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3947213,00.html |title=Hamas claims responsibility for shooting attack - Israel News, Ynetnews |publisher=Ynetnews.com |date=June 20, 1995 |accessdate=October 1, 2010}}</ref> In a separate statement, Hamas spokesman ] said, "Hamas blesses the Hebron operation and considers it as a normal reaction to the occupation crime."<ref name=Pfeffer/><ref name=Bader/> Abu Ubaida, spokesman for the ], claimed "full responsibility" for the attack and described it as a "heroic operation."<ref name=Pfeffer/><ref name=Bader> Hazem Bader, Sept. 1, 2010, AFP.</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3947213,00.html |title=Hamas claims responsibility for shooting attack - Israel News, Ynetnews |newspaper=Ynetnews |publisher=Ynetnews.com |date=June 20, 1995 |accessdate=October 1, 2010 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20101009100234/http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0%2C7340%2CL-3947213%2C00.html |archivedate=9 October 2010 |url-status=live|last1=Waked |first1=Ali }}</ref> In a separate statement, Hamas spokesman ] said, "Hamas blesses the Hebron operation and considers it as a normal reaction to the occupation crime."<ref name=Pfeffer/><ref name=Bader/>


], when asked about the attack, said that Hamas will resume its efforts to "kill illegal settlers on our land."<ref name=promise></ref> In a later CNN interview a Hamas leader living in Damascus, ], vowed "resistance" if the international community did not force Israel to return to its 1967 borders. When asked about the August attacks he stated that Hamas would continue to "kill illegal settlers on our land,"<ref name=promise></ref> although Hamas did not actually carry out any such attacks in the forthcoming period.


====Celebration==== ====Celebration====
In the city of ] in northern Gaza, "hundreds" of Hamas supporters celebrated the killings in the street after the evening prayer, as an imam urged them on over the loudspeakers of the mosque in the hours before Hamas acknowledged responsibility for the killings. All throughout Gaza, more than 3,000 Palestinians celebrated the attack.<ref></ref> In the city of ] in northern ], "hundreds" of Hamas supporters celebrated the killings in the street after the evening prayer, as an imam urged them on over the loudspeakers of the mosque in the hours before Hamas acknowledged responsibility for the killings. In Gaza city, more than 3,000 Palestinians celebrated the attack.<ref>{{dead link|date=June 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref>


Hamas legislator ] spoke at the celebration, criticizing ] for entering negotiations on the grounds that Abbas is “representing only himself. According to Masri, killing the four Israelis “was the Palestinian people’s response to the talks.<ref name=Kershnerlander/> Hamas legislator ] spoke at the celebration, criticizing ] for entering negotiations on the grounds that Abbas is "representing only himself." According to Masri, killing the four Israelis "was the Palestinian people’s response to the talks."<ref name=Kershnerlander/>


====Part of a political strategy==== ====Part of a political strategy====
According to an unnamed Israeli security official, this was the start of a ] of “terrorist attacks” designed to foil the ]. <ref>{{cite web|author=Česky |url=http://en.wikipedia.org/Peace_process_in_the_Israeli%E2%80%93Palestinian_conflict#2010_direct_talks |title=Peace process in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict - Misplaced Pages, the 💕 |publisher=En.wikipedia.org |date= |accessdate=October 1, 2010}}</ref>.<ref name=MaanSept> September 13, 2010, Ma’an.</ref> Three days after the shootings, Hamas announced the formation of an alliance of 13 militant groups to launch a wave of "more effective attacks" against Israelis, saying that this would include rocket attacks and that suicide bombings would not be ruled out.<ref name=jerusalempoststaff> September 3, 2010, Jerusalem Post.</ref> According to an unnamed Israeli security official, this was the start of a ] of "terrorist attacks" designed to foil the ].<ref name=MaanSept> September 13, 2010, Ma’an.</ref> Two days after the shootings, Hamas announced the formation of an alliance of 13 militant groups to launch a wave of "more effective attacks" against Israel, not ruling out suicide bombings when questioned.
<ref> September 2, 2010, reuters.</ref>


Other analysts{{who}} believe that the "true target" of the spate of attacks is the Palestinian Authority.<ref name=Levinson> Charles Levinson, September 3, 2010, Wall Street Journal.</ref> Other analysts{{Who|date=October 2010}} believe that the "true target" of the spate of attacks is the Palestinian Authority.<ref name=Levinson> Charles Levinson, September 3, 2010, Wall Street Journal.</ref>


====Abduction plan==== ====Abduction plan====
According to ''] an'' Egyptian newspaper , Hamas had originally planned to abduct the bodies, hoping to secure a mass prisoner release for their return. The abductors had also reportedly hoped to sabotage the peace talks by provoking the ] into launching a large-scale search for the victims in the ]. These plans were foiled by the arrival of another car on the scene, causing the killers to flee.<ref name=Khoury>, Jack Khoury, September 20, 2010, Haaretz.</ref>

According to the Egyptian newspaper '']'', Hamas had originally planned to abduct the bodies, hoping to secure a mass prisoner release for their return. The abductors had also reportedly hoped to sabotage the peace talks by provoking the ] into launching a large-scale search for the victims in the ]. These plans were foiled by the arrival of another car on the scene, causing the killers to flee.<ref name=Khoury>, Jack Khoury, September 20, 2010, Haaretz.</ref>


===Israel=== ===Israel===
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] President President Mahmoud Abbas said that the attack in the Hebron was designed to "disrupt the peace process. and can't be regarded as an act of resistance." ] President President Mahmoud Abbas said that the attack in the Hebron was designed to "disrupt the peace process. and can't be regarded as an act of resistance."


Prime Minister ] condemned the attack and said it was designed to "undermine the PLO's efforts to rally international support for the Palestinians's demands." He said that the attack was in contradiction with the national interests of the Palestinians and the PA's strategic vision.<ref></ref> Prime Minister ] condemned the attack and said it was designed to "undermine the PLO's efforts to rally international support for the Palestinians's demands." He said that the attack was in contradiction with the national interests of the Palestinians and the PA's strategic vision.<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100901202018/http://www.jpost.com/Israel/Article.aspx?id=186640 |date=September 1, 2010 }}</ref>


Palestinian security forces arrested up approximately 250 Hamas supporters in the West Bank, Hamas called the arrests an act of "treason."<ref name=APJP/> Palestinian security forces arrested up approximately 250 Hamas supporters in the West Bank, Hamas called the arrests an act of "treason."<ref name=APJP/>


===Settlers=== ===Settlers===
] were reportedly "enraged" by the attack.<ref name=Kershnerlander/> The chair of the South Mount Hebron settlers’ council, ], asserted in an interview with a broadcast journalist that "for the past 100 years there has been a link between the Jewish people’s desire to live and the Arab people’s desire to kill us."<ref name=Kershnerlander/> The day after the attack, several dozen settler youths stoned Palestinians near ]&mdash;home of the four shooting victims&mdash;and attempted to set fire to a Palestinian field in the locality. A second group of settlers entered a Palestinian neighborhood in ] and attempted to stone residents.<ref name=settler_reprisals>, ''The Jerusalem Post'', 2010-09-02.</ref>


], the largest of the Israeli settler organizations announced that it would stop obeying the Israeli government's construction freeze at 6 p.m. Wednesday, September 1, mere hours before peace talks are scheduled to begin in Washington, D.C., and that construction would go forward on "hundreds" of new homes in the settlements.<ref name=Levinson/> The Palestinian Authority countered by announcing that it would pull out of the peace talks if the building freeze ends.<ref name=Levinson/> A spokesman for the Israeli government said that the construction freeze would continue thorough September 26 as scheduled, and that Israel would proceed with the peace talks.<ref name=Levinson/> However, he also said that attacks of this kind make it difficult for Israel to make compromises to achieve a peace agreement.<ref name=Levinson/>
] were reportedly "enraged" by the attack.<ref name=Kershnerlander/> The chair of the South Mount Hebron settlers’ council, ], asserted in an interview with a broadcast journalist that “For the past 100 years there has been a link between the Jewish people’s desire to live and the Arab people’s desire to kill us.<ref name=Kershnerlander/> The day after the attack, several dozen settler youths stoned Palestinians near ]&mdash;home of the four shooting victims&mdash;and attempted to set fire to a Palestinian field in the locality. A second group of settlers entered a Palestinian neighborhood in ] and attempted to stone residents.<ref name=settler_reprisals>, ''The Jerusalem Post'', 2010-09-02.</ref>

], the largest of the Israeli settler organizations announced that it would stop obeying the Israeli government's construction freeze at 6 p.m. Wednesday, September 1, mere hours before peace talks are scheduled to begin in Washington, D.C., and that construction would go forward on "hundreds" of new homes in the settlements.<ref name=Levinson/> The Palestinian Authority countered by announcing that it would pull out of the peace talks if the building freeze ends.<ref name=Levinson/> A spokesman for the Israeli government said that the construction freeze would continue thorough September 26 as scheduled, and that Israel would proceed with the peace talks.<ref name=Levinson/> However, he also said that attacks of this kind make it difficult for Israel to make compromises to achieve a peace agreement.<ref name=Levinson/>


On September 1, 2010, in a direct response to the shooting, activist settlers and "hundreds" of members of ] holding placards that read "They shoot, we build" began construction in settlements across the West Bank, including a structure at the entrance to Kiryat Arba, very near the site of the attack.<ref name=Jerusalempost> staff, September 1, 2010, Jerusalem Post.</ref> On September 1, 2010, in a direct response to the shooting, activist settlers and "hundreds" of members of ] holding placards that read "They shoot, we build" began construction in settlements across the West Bank, including a structure at the entrance to Kiryat Arba, very near the site of the attack.<ref name=Jerusalempost> staff, September 1, 2010, Jerusalem Post.</ref>


===International=== ===International===
] responded by calling on Hamas to cease attacks on civilians.<ref name=Humanrightswatch> September 2, 2010, Reuters.</ref> ], Secretary-General of the United nations, said that "this attack must be recognized for what it is: a cynical and blatant attempt to undermine the direct Israeli-Palestinian negotiations starting tomorrow."<ref name="UN Ban Ki-moon"></ref> ] responded by calling on Hamas to cease attacks on civilians.<ref name=Humanrightswatch> September 2, 2010, Reuters.</ref> ], Secretary-General of the United nations, said that "this attack must be recognized for what it is: a cynical and blatant attempt to undermine the direct Israeli-Palestinian negotiations starting tomorrow."<ref name="UN Ban Ki-moon"></ref>


=== Military === ===Military===
Palestinian Authority and Israel forces started arresting Hamas supporters. Israeli forces killed Iyad Shilbaya, a commander of the ], twelve others were arrested in the overnight operation between September 16 and 17. Hamas military wing said it is responsible for the killing at the end of August of four Jewish settlers in the West Bank.<ref name="BBC_Sep_17"> September 17, 2010, BBC news</ref> Palestinian Authority and Israel forces started arresting Hamas supporters. Israeli forces killed Iyad Shilbaya, a commander of the ], twelve others were arrested in the overnight operation between September 16 and 17. Hamas' military wing said it was responsible for the killing at the end of August of four Israeli settlers in the West Bank.<ref name="BBC_Sep_17"> September 17, 2010, BBC news</ref>


==Political ramifications== == Political ramifications ==
In a "fiery" speech shortly after the killings, Hamas leader ] rejected peace negotiations, asserting that "liberating" all of the land between the ] and the ] is a religious and a moral duty.<ref name=APJP> AP September 1, 2010, Jerusalem Post.</ref> In a "fiery" speech shortly after the killings, Hamas leader ] rejected peace negotiations, asserting that "liberating" all of the land between the ] and the ] is a religious and a moral duty.<ref name=APJP> AP September 1, 2010, Jerusalem Post.</ref>


According to the '']'', this and a second Hamas shooting in the West Bank two days later, "cast a shadow" over face to face peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority just as they were about to begin in Washington, D.C.<ref name=Levinsonsolomon> Charles Levinson, Jay Solomon, September 2, 2010, Wall Stret Journal.</ref> The Palestinian Authority responded ot the shootings by arresting "dozens" of suspected Hamas activists in the West Bank.<ref name=Levinsonsolomon/> According to '']'', this and a second Hamas shooting in the West Bank two days later, "cast a shadow" over face to face peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority just as they were about to begin in Washington, D.C.<ref name=Levinsonsolomon> Charles Levinson, Jay Solomon, September 2, 2010, Wall Street Journal.</ref> The Palestinian Authority responded to the shootings by arresting "dozens" of suspected Hamas activists in the West Bank.<ref name=Levinsonsolomon/>

According to '']'', the immediate Hamas claim of responsibility is out of the ordinary since in recent years Hamas has "refrained" from claiming responsibility for attacks.<ref name=Kershnerlander/> However, the reduction in rocket attacks on Israel launched form ] had brought pressure on Hamas from Palestinian Arabs who question the group's commitment to fighting Israel.<ref name=Kershnerlander></ref> According to '']'', the attack "seemed aimed at torpedoing a new round of ] in Washington this week between Israel and the Palestinians."<ref name=Levinson-2> Charles Levinson, September 1, 2010, Wall Street Journal.</ref> Both Israel and the Palestinian Authority "seized" the attack as an opportunity to press an agenda; Israel demanded firm guarantees that a West Bank controlled by the Palestinian Authority would not be used a base for attacks on Israel, and the Palestinian Authority demanded that Israeli settlements be removed.<ref name=Levinson-2/>

An editorial in '']'' suggested that this incident would "cast a substantial shadow over the talks" citing two reasons. Like '']'' Hamas's unusual assertion of responsibility was cited along with their further resolve to continue such attacks. A demonstration in Gaza in support of the attack was further cited as evidence that Hamas would not accept negotiations conducted by ] on their behalf. The editorial secondly echoed Israel's concern that under Palestinian rule the West Bank could become a base for attacks against Israel.<ref name=excathedraeditorial> Staff Editorial, September 8, 2010, Washington Post.</ref>

==Israeli response==
On 8 October 2010 the IDF raided several buildings in ] where the militants suspected of carrying out the attack were holed up. Two of the suspects were killed upon storming the house and six others were arrested. The two dead were:
* ] (33), a senior Hamas member from ]. Karm had previously been imprisoned for terror-related activities but was freed in August 2009, after which he quickly returned to working for Hamas' military wing.
* Mamoun al-Natshe (24), a low-level Hamas militant from Hebron. Natshe had been imprisoned in Israel for several months in 2008.<ref>, Jerusalem Post 08-10-2010</ref><ref name=revenge>, Jerusalem Post 08-10-2010</ref>

Hamas swore revenge for the operation and congratulated the Palestinians of Hebron for "continuing to sacrifice ]s in the fight against Israel". The Islamist group also derided the ] (PA) for the ongoing ] and sharply criticized ] for what it called Fatah's complicity in the operation and its persecution of Hamas, stating that Hamas would "not ask for Fatah's permission... to carry out more attacks".<ref name=revenge/><ref name=kills>, Ynet News 08-10-2010</ref>


The Palestinian Authority officially condemned the operation, but PA sources said privately that the Palestinian security establishment welcomed the elimination of al-Karmi because it would weaken the power of rival Hamas in the West Bank.<ref name=kills/>
According to the '']'', the immediate Hamas claim of responsibility is out of the ordinary since in recent years Hamas has "refrained" from claiming responsibility for attacks.<ref name=Kershnerlander/> However, the reduction in rocket attacks on Israel launched form ] had brought pressure on Hamas from Palestinian Arabs who question the group's commitment to fighting Israel.<ref name=Kershnerlander></ref> According to the ], the attack "seemed aimed at torpedoing a new round of ] in Washington this week between Israel and the Palestinians."<ref name=Levinson> Charles Levinson, September 1, 2010, Wall Street Journal.</ref> Both Israel and the Palestinian Authority "seized" the attack as an opportunity to press an agenda; Israel demanded firm guarantees that a West Bank controlled by the Palestinian Authority would not be used a base for attacks on Israel, and the Palestinian Authority demanded that Jewish settlements be removed.<ref name=Levinson/>


Israeli Defense Minister ] praised the security forces for the success of the operation: "The actions in Hebron are a rapid response to the murder of four Israelis in August of this year near Kiryat Arba. The IDF and security forces will continue to work everywhere with uncompromising determination against terror organizations to ensure continued peace in Judea and Samaria".<ref name=revenge/>
The ] editorialized that this incident "cast a substantial shadow over the talks, for two reasons. One was Hamas's overt assertion of responsibility -- something it has often avoided in recent years. A spokesman for the movement's armed wing claimed the attacks were just the beginning of a series; in Gaza, Hamas's supporters held a demonstration to celebrate the murders. Those who supposed that the Islamic movement would quietly observe and even passively support the bargaining of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas with Mr. Netanyahu were brutally corrected. Second, violence by Hamas in the West Bank serves to underscore one of the central Israeli concerns about a peace settlement: that under Palestinian rule the West Bank could become another base for attacks on Israel, as Gaza is."<ref name=excathedraeditorial> Staff Editorial, September 8, 2010, Washington Post.</ref>


==See also== ==See also==
* ] * ]
* ] * ]
* ]


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist|2}} {{Reflist|30em}}


{{Israeli-Palestinian Conflict}} {{Palestinian militancy attacks in the 2010s}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:August 2010 West Bank Shooting}} {{DEFAULTSORT:West Bank Shooting}}
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Latest revision as of 05:43, 12 November 2024

August 2010 West Bank shooting attack
Part of the 2010 Palestinian militancy campaign
August 2010 West Bank shooting attack is located in the Southern West BankAugust 2010 West Bank shooting attackclass=notpageimage| The location of Kiryat Arba, West Bank
LocationRoute 60, West Bank
near Kiryat Arba
Coordinates31°32′32″N 35°07′51″E / 31.5421°N 35.1307°E / 31.5421; 35.1307
DateAugust 31, 2010 (2010-08-31)
Attack typeDrive-by shooting
Deaths4 civilians
PerpetratorHamas

The August 2010 West Bank shooting attack was an attack near the Israeli settlement of Kiryat Arba in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, carried out by Hamas militants. Four Israeli settlers from the settlements of Beit Hagai and Efrat were killed after militants attacked their vehicle. It was the deadliest Palestinian attack on Israelis in over two years.

Hamas hailed the attack as "heroic" and promised further attempts to kill "illegal settlers" in the West Bank. Hamas supporters in Jabalia publicly celebrated the killings. The attack was condemned by the United Nations, Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

The assailants were arrested by the Palestinian Authority but promptly released after Hamas accused the authority of treason. On 8 October, Israel arrested militants connected with the attack in a raid in which two Hamas operatives were killed.

The attack

A couple and two additional people hitching a ride were driving on Route 60 close to the settlement of Kiryat Arba. Near the entrance of the settlement, Hamas militants began firing on the vehicle, killing the driver and forcing the car off the road. According to witnesses, the attackers then approached the car and shot the occupants in their seats at close range.

The police believe that militants in the Palestinian drive-by shooting opened fire from a vehicle driving alongside the victim's car. A paramedic with Magen David Adom described the scene to a journalist, saying that he saw "a car that was pierced with dozens of bullets and inside there were four bodies. There was absolutely no chance of helping."

Arrests

Hamas declared the arrest of the attackers by the Palestinian Authority "treason." All of the arrested suspects were "quickly" released, reminding the editorial staff of The Washington Post of "Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's duplicitous response to acts of terrorism."

Victims

One of the murdered couples was from a settlement of Beit Hagai in Hebron Hills. Their names were Yitzhak and Tali Aymes, ages 45 and 47. They were the parents of 6 children, ranging in age from 5 to 24, and of 1 grandchild. Tali was 9 months pregnant at the time of her death. Yehuda Glick became guardians of the six Aymes orphans (besides caring for six children and two foster children of their own).

Kochava Even Chaim, a teacher in Efrat with an eight-year-old daughter, was killed. Her husband was among the paramedics who responded to the shooting and discovered that one of the victims was his wife.

The fourth victim was Avishai Shindler, who had recently moved with his wife to live in Beit Haggai.

Thousands of people attended funerals as the victims were buried in Jerusalem, Ashdod, and Petah Tikva.

Reactions

Hamas

Abu Ubaida, spokesman for the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades, claimed "full responsibility" for the attack and described it as a "heroic operation." In a separate statement, Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said, "Hamas blesses the Hebron operation and considers it as a normal reaction to the occupation crime."

In a later CNN interview a Hamas leader living in Damascus, Khaled Mashal, vowed "resistance" if the international community did not force Israel to return to its 1967 borders. When asked about the August attacks he stated that Hamas would continue to "kill illegal settlers on our land," although Hamas did not actually carry out any such attacks in the forthcoming period.

Celebration

In the city of Jabalia in northern Gaza, "hundreds" of Hamas supporters celebrated the killings in the street after the evening prayer, as an imam urged them on over the loudspeakers of the mosque in the hours before Hamas acknowledged responsibility for the killings. In Gaza city, more than 3,000 Palestinians celebrated the attack.

Hamas legislator Mushir al-Masri spoke at the celebration, criticizing Mahmoud Abbas for entering negotiations on the grounds that Abbas is "representing only himself." According to Masri, killing the four Israelis "was the Palestinian people’s response to the talks."

Part of a political strategy

According to an unnamed Israeli security official, this was the start of a Hamas campaign of "terrorist attacks" designed to foil the 2010 peace talks. Two days after the shootings, Hamas announced the formation of an alliance of 13 militant groups to launch a wave of "more effective attacks" against Israel, not ruling out suicide bombings when questioned.

Other analysts believe that the "true target" of the spate of attacks is the Palestinian Authority.

Abduction plan

According to Al-Ahram an Egyptian newspaper , Hamas had originally planned to abduct the bodies, hoping to secure a mass prisoner release for their return. The abductors had also reportedly hoped to sabotage the peace talks by provoking the IDF into launching a large-scale search for the victims in the Palestinian territories. These plans were foiled by the arrival of another car on the scene, causing the killers to flee.

Israel

Israeli defense minister Ehud Barak referred to the attack as a "very grave incident" and said the Israeli military will "do everything they can to capture the murderers."

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dispatched Yuval Diskin and Gabi Ashkenazi, and directed them to respond to the attack without "any diplomatic constraints against the murderers, and act aggressively against those who sent them."

Israeli Vice Prime Minister Silvan Shalom, who was acting prime minister at the time of the incident because Prime Minister Netanyahu was abroad, said, "There are those who continue to take the path of terror and are busy killing innocents," and "Today it is clearer more than ever that the real obstacle to peace is terrorism and the extremists who will do anything to send the entire region up in flames. It is incumbent on the Palestinian Authority to fulfill its obligations in the territories that are under its purview."

Palestinian Authority

Palestinian Authority President President Mahmoud Abbas said that the attack in the Hebron was designed to "disrupt the peace process. and can't be regarded as an act of resistance."

Prime Minister Salam Fayyad condemned the attack and said it was designed to "undermine the PLO's efforts to rally international support for the Palestinians's demands." He said that the attack was in contradiction with the national interests of the Palestinians and the PA's strategic vision.

Palestinian security forces arrested up approximately 250 Hamas supporters in the West Bank, Hamas called the arrests an act of "treason."

Settlers

Israeli settlers were reportedly "enraged" by the attack. The chair of the South Mount Hebron settlers’ council, Tzviki Bar-Hai, asserted in an interview with a broadcast journalist that "for the past 100 years there has been a link between the Jewish people’s desire to live and the Arab people’s desire to kill us." The day after the attack, several dozen settler youths stoned Palestinians near Beit Hagai—home of the four shooting victims—and attempted to set fire to a Palestinian field in the locality. A second group of settlers entered a Palestinian neighborhood in Hebron and attempted to stone residents.

Yesha Council, the largest of the Israeli settler organizations announced that it would stop obeying the Israeli government's construction freeze at 6 p.m. Wednesday, September 1, mere hours before peace talks are scheduled to begin in Washington, D.C., and that construction would go forward on "hundreds" of new homes in the settlements. The Palestinian Authority countered by announcing that it would pull out of the peace talks if the building freeze ends. A spokesman for the Israeli government said that the construction freeze would continue thorough September 26 as scheduled, and that Israel would proceed with the peace talks. However, he also said that attacks of this kind make it difficult for Israel to make compromises to achieve a peace agreement.

On September 1, 2010, in a direct response to the shooting, activist settlers and "hundreds" of members of Likud holding placards that read "They shoot, we build" began construction in settlements across the West Bank, including a structure at the entrance to Kiryat Arba, very near the site of the attack.

International

Human Rights Watch responded by calling on Hamas to cease attacks on civilians. Ban Ki-moon, Secretary-General of the United nations, said that "this attack must be recognized for what it is: a cynical and blatant attempt to undermine the direct Israeli-Palestinian negotiations starting tomorrow."

Military

Palestinian Authority and Israel forces started arresting Hamas supporters. Israeli forces killed Iyad Shilbaya, a commander of the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades, twelve others were arrested in the overnight operation between September 16 and 17. Hamas' military wing said it was responsible for the killing at the end of August of four Israeli settlers in the West Bank.

Political ramifications

In a "fiery" speech shortly after the killings, Hamas leader Mahmoud Zahar rejected peace negotiations, asserting that "liberating" all of the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea is a religious and a moral duty.

According to The Wall Street Journal, this and a second Hamas shooting in the West Bank two days later, "cast a shadow" over face to face peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority just as they were about to begin in Washington, D.C. The Palestinian Authority responded to the shootings by arresting "dozens" of suspected Hamas activists in the West Bank.

According to The New York Times, the immediate Hamas claim of responsibility is out of the ordinary since in recent years Hamas has "refrained" from claiming responsibility for attacks. However, the reduction in rocket attacks on Israel launched form Gaza had brought pressure on Hamas from Palestinian Arabs who question the group's commitment to fighting Israel. According to The Wall Street Journal, the attack "seemed aimed at torpedoing a new round of peace talks in Washington this week between Israel and the Palestinians." Both Israel and the Palestinian Authority "seized" the attack as an opportunity to press an agenda; Israel demanded firm guarantees that a West Bank controlled by the Palestinian Authority would not be used a base for attacks on Israel, and the Palestinian Authority demanded that Israeli settlements be removed.

An editorial in The Washington Post suggested that this incident would "cast a substantial shadow over the talks" citing two reasons. Like The New York Times Hamas's unusual assertion of responsibility was cited along with their further resolve to continue such attacks. A demonstration in Gaza in support of the attack was further cited as evidence that Hamas would not accept negotiations conducted by Mahmoud Abbas on their behalf. The editorial secondly echoed Israel's concern that under Palestinian rule the West Bank could become a base for attacks against Israel.

Israeli response

On 8 October 2010 the IDF raided several buildings in Hebron where the militants suspected of carrying out the attack were holed up. Two of the suspects were killed upon storming the house and six others were arrested. The two dead were:

  • Nashaath al-Karmi (33), a senior Hamas member from Tulkarm. Karm had previously been imprisoned for terror-related activities but was freed in August 2009, after which he quickly returned to working for Hamas' military wing.
  • Mamoun al-Natshe (24), a low-level Hamas militant from Hebron. Natshe had been imprisoned in Israel for several months in 2008.

Hamas swore revenge for the operation and congratulated the Palestinians of Hebron for "continuing to sacrifice shaheeds in the fight against Israel". The Islamist group also derided the Palestinian Authority (PA) for the ongoing 2010 Israeli-Palestinian peace talks and sharply criticized Fatah for what it called Fatah's complicity in the operation and its persecution of Hamas, stating that Hamas would "not ask for Fatah's permission... to carry out more attacks".

The Palestinian Authority officially condemned the operation, but PA sources said privately that the Palestinian security establishment welcomed the elimination of al-Karmi because it would weaken the power of rival Hamas in the West Bank.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak praised the security forces for the success of the operation: "The actions in Hebron are a rapid response to the murder of four Israelis in August of this year near Kiryat Arba. The IDF and security forces will continue to work everywhere with uncompromising determination against terror organizations to ensure continued peace in Judea and Samaria".

See also

References

  1. " 4 Israelis shot dead by terrorists in West Bank," Archived January 27, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Yaakov Katz and Yaakov Lappin, 31 August 2010, Jerusalem Pst.
  2. ^ "Four Israelis killed by Hamas terrorists in West Bank," Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Israel.
  3. ^ "Hamas Threats Suggest Palestinian Divisions," Charles Levinson, September 3, 2010, Wall Street Journal.
  4. ^ Mashaal: We'll continue 'to kill illegal settlers'
  5. ^ "4 Israelis shot dead, shattering years of relative calm in West Bank," Anshel Pfeffer, Chaim Levinson, Jonathan Lis, Avi Issacharoff and Amos Harel, September 1, 2010, Ha'aretz.
  6. "Arrest of West Bank attackers 'treason': Hamas," Sep 7, 2010, AFP.
  7. ^ "The Shadow of Hamas," Staff Editorial, September 8, 2010, Washington Post.
  8. "Victims on the road to 'peace' - The Boston Globe". Boston.com. September 5, 2010. Archived from the original on 7 September 2010. Retrieved October 1, 2010.
  9. Ghert-Zand, Renee (2 November 2014). "Yehudah Glick 'was a marked person,' father says". Times of Israel. Retrieved 2 November 2014.
  10. " 'There hasn't been a group like this since Rabbi Akiva,' Hundreds gather to mourn 4 victims of Kiryat Arba terror attack; funerals to be held in Jerusalem, Ashdod, Petah Tikva." September 1, 2010, Jerusalem Post.
  11. ^ "Tensions Rise as Mideast Talks Begin; As Summit Opens in Washington, a Second Shooting and Protests by West Bank Settlers Raise the Threat to Peace," Charles Levinson, Jay Solomon, September 2, 2010, Wall Street Journal.
  12. ^ "Four Israelis killed in West Bank shooting, Hamas rejoices," Hazem Bader, Sept. 1, 2010, AFP.
  13. Waked, Ali (June 20, 1995). "Hamas claims responsibility for shooting attack - Israel News, Ynetnews". Ynetnews. Ynetnews.com. Archived from the original on 9 October 2010. Retrieved October 1, 2010.
  14. Palestinians crack down on Hamas after shooting
  15. ^ "Killing of Israeli Settlers Rattles Leaders, Isabel Kershner, Mark Lander, August 31, 2010, New York Times.
  16. "Shin Bet says Hamas to resume attacks," September 13, 2010, Ma’an.
  17. "Gaza militants vow wave of attacks against Israel," September 2, 2010, reuters.
  18. "'Hamas planned to abduct bodies of Israeli terror victims in West Bank", Jack Khoury, September 20, 2010, Haaretz.
  19. PM: 'Terrorism will not determine Israel’s borders' Archived September 1, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ "Hamas leader rejects compromise, peace with Israel," AP September 1, 2010, Jerusalem Post.
  21. "Settlers launch reprisal actions for shooting attack", The Jerusalem Post, 2010-09-02.
  22. " Settlers begin construction in settlements all over W.Bank; Residents hold signs saying 'They shoot, we build.' staff, September 1, 2010, Jerusalem Post.
  23. " West Bank/Israel: Hamas Must End Attacks on Civilians," September 2, 2010, Reuters.
  24. Ban condemns West Bank shooting of four Israelis
  25. Israeli forces kill West Bank Hamas commander September 17, 2010, BBC news
  26. ^ "Hamas Hits Israel in Threat to Talks," Charles Levinson, September 1, 2010, Wall Street Journal.
  27. IDF kills two in Hebron involved in Beit Hagai killings, Jerusalem Post 08-10-2010
  28. ^ Hamas swears revenge for IDF attack that killed two members, Jerusalem Post 08-10-2010
  29. ^ IDF kills 2 Hamas members in Hebron, Ynet News 08-10-2010
Prominent Palestinian militancy attacks in the 2010s
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