Israeli troops arrested two Palestinians on Wednesday suspected of involvement in the killing earlier this week of an American-Israeli, the military said, in a daylight raid in a West Bank refugee camp.
The arrest raid came as Israel's parliament was meeting to give initial approval to a proposal to impose the death penalty against Palestinians convicted in deadly attacks. A top minister in Israel's far-right government, meanwhile, called for “erasing” a Palestinian village in the occupied West Bank where radical Jewish settlers went on a rampage earlier this week.
The official Palestinian news agency Wafa reported that three Palestinians were wounded in the Israeli raid in the Aqabat Jaber refugee camp. The military said it shot one suspect as he tried to flee, but provided no further details.
Israeli leaders said the men arrested were the killers wanted in the death of Elan Ganeles, a 27-year-old Israeli-American who was fatally shot while driving on a West Bank highway near the refugee camp. Ganeles, of West Hartford, Connecticut, lived in the U.S. and was visiting Israel for a wedding, friends said.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised the arrests. “Whoever tries to harm us will pay,” he said.
Wednesday's arrest raid came during one of the worst rounds of Israeli-Palestinian violence in years, with more than 60 Palestinians and 14 Israelis killed this year. Earlier this week, after two Israelis were killed in the West Bank, an Israeli settler mob set homes and cars ablaze in a Palestinian town, burning dozens of cars and homes and leaving one man dead.
A top military official said forces were not prepared for the violence and a senior Israeli Cabinet minister said Wednesday the town “must be erased.”
The bloodshed is part of a year of escalating violence triggered by Israeli raids on Palestinian areas of the West Bank which were prompted by a spate of Palestinian attacks against Israelis.
Tensions have surged in the West Bank, especially after the settler attack on the Palestinian town of Hawara.
The incident sparked international condemnation as well as rebuke from Israel’s political opposition. But the country’s right-wing government, made up of ultranationalist, pro-settler parties, has not condemned the violence, only appealing to settlers not to take the law into their own hands.
On Wednesday, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich went even further, saying he thought the town that was attacked should be erased.
Speaking at a conference hosted by Israeli business paper The Marker, Smotrich said that “I think the village of Hawara needs to be erased. I think the state of Israel needs to do it and not private citizens.”
The settler attack was the worst such violence in decades and on Tuesday, Maj. Gen. Yehuda Fuchs, head of the military’s Central Command in charge of the West Bank, told Israel’s Channel 12 that the military was not prepared for what he called “a pogrom done by outlaws.”
“We were not prepared for a pogrom of this magnitude, with many dozens of people,” he said, using a term that usually refers to ethnic mob attacks against Jews in eastern Europe in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Also Wednesday, Israel's parliament was to hold a preliminary vote on a bill to allow the death penalty for Palestinians convicted of killing Israelis.
Public Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir's ultranationalist Jewish Power faction has promoted the death sentence bill as a means of deterring would-be Palestinian attackers after a more than year-long surge in violence that shows no signs of abating.
Critics say the death penalty is immoral, antithetical to Jewish principles, and will not serve as a deterrent.
The proposed law would allow the death penalty for a person who killed an Israeli “as an act motivated by racism or hostility toward the public” and “with the aim of harming the state of Israel and the revival of the Jewish people in its land.”
Limor Son Har-Melech, the ultranationalist settler lawmaker proposing the bill, told Kan public radio that “it is just and most moral that someone who murders Jews, and just because they’re Jews” is sentenced to death.
So far this year, 62 Palestinians, about half of them affiliated with armed groups, have been killed by Israeli troops and civilians. In the same period, 14 Israelis, all but one of them civilians, have been killed in Palestinian attacks.
Israel says its raids are meant to dismantle militant networks and prevent future attacks, but there has been little evidence that they are slowing the violence. The Palestinians view them as further entrenchment of Israel's 55-year open-ended occupation.
Israel captured the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip in the 1967 Mideast war, territories the Palestinians claim for their hoped-for state.