by Nadav Shragai
The Palestinian Authority's political zigzagging is more puzzling than ever • Fatah officials fan the flames of incitement, while PA security forces collaborate with the Israeli military to stop surging violence from spiraling into a full-blown intifada.
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                                             A masked Palestinian boy  holds a knife during an anti-Israeli protest in the Gaza Strip                                                                                                     
Photo credit: Reuters                                          | 
The optical illusion of the past week,  suggesting the current wave of terrorism was winding down and allowing  even the news cycle to shift its focus, has been refuted by reality, and  while the number of Israeli casualties has decreased dramatically, the  number of attacks has actually gone up. They have just proven far less  successful. 
Undermining the success rate of the stabbing  attacks that have come to characterize the surge in violence plaguing  Israel since early October, is the Israeli public's vigilance, and the  fact that many terrorists have been neutralized by civilians and  security forces prior to fully carrying out their nefarious plans, or  nearly immediately afterwards, preventing them from inflicting untold  harm. 
Make no mistake, the spate of knife terrorism  is far from over, and if in its beginning east Jerusalem was the main  exporter of terrorists, the last week has shifted the focus to Hebron --  Hamas' "capital" in Judea and Samaria. 
Twenty-nine terrorist attacks have taken place in the Hebron area over the past month, 22 of them stabbing attacks.
This week, Hebron was the scene of a sight as  gruesome as any attack: On Sunday, during the funeral of Raed Jaradat,  the terrorist who carried out the Oct. 26 stabbing attack in Beit  Hanoun, north of Kiryat Arba, his father turned to one of the  participants, the father of Dania Arshid, a young Palestinian woman who a  few days earlier was killed after trying to stab an Israeli soldier at  the Cave of the Patriarchs, and proposed a "marriage of souls" between  their deceased children. 
Arshid's father accepted the horrid proposal  immediately, and the audience cheered. Music soon blared, turning the  funeral into a macabre "wedding of shahids" (martyrs).
The following day, citing incitement, the  Israel Defense Force shut down Al-Hurriya, a Fatah-affiliated radio  station in Hebron. The station, which overtly calls for the murder of  Jews, has been shut down twice before, in 2002 and in 2008. 
Tensions in Hebron are a cause for great  concern for the defense establishment, as thousands of Jews from across  Israel plan to visit the city and the Cave of the Patriarchs to mark  Shabbat Chayei Sarah ("The Life of Sarah," the fifth weekly portion in  the annual Torah reading cycle). Six IDF battalions have been deployed  in and around the city to secure worshipers. The concern is from  stabbing attacks, as well as from the use of firearms, which Hamas  relentlessly instigates. 
No lesser between two evils 
"In the choice between fighting the plague and  fighting cholera, Israel has to fight both," a senior defense official  said this week, at the conclusion of a security briefing. While it is  unclear which is which, the official was clearly speaking of Hamas and  the Palestinian Authority. 
Hamas is pushing would-be Palestinian  terrorists to introduce shooting attacks into the equation, to little  success at this point, while the Palestinian Authority is going out of  its way to label the surge in violence as a spate of "popular  resistance." 
The Palestinian Authority's position is  complex: On one hand, Ramallah is publicly opposed to escalating the  situation into a full-blown intifada, complete with shooting and suicide  attacks, and the Palestinian security forces are collaborating with the  IDF and the Shin Bet security agency to quell the violence. 
The reasons are mostly tactical: Fatah is wary  of losing control over the West Bank, it is concerned that Israel would  undermine the Palestinian social fabric, and it is especially wary of  potential Hamas power plays.
On the other hand, Palestinian Authority  President Mahmoud Abbas and his officials have expressed public support  for terrorist attacks, lauding those who perpetrate them. Ramallah is  behind much of the anti-Israel propaganda on the Palestinian street,  pushing incitement to one of its highest levels ever. 
There are numerous examples for Palestinian  incitement, and organizations like the Middle East Media Research  Institute, the Palestinian Media Watch and the Meir Amit Intelligence  and Terrorism Information Center (ITIC), as well as official Israeli  intelligence bodies, have their hands full documenting events on the  ground. 
Top military and government officials,  including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Moshe  Ya'alon, agree that incitement is greasing the wheels of terrorism and  is the driving force in the prolonged spate of terrorism.
Palestinian lies and incitement are now  verging on the intolerable, as Abbas and other Palestinian officials  systematically present incidents in which terrorists were killed by  security forces as the "execution of innocent Palestinian civilians"  whose only crime was rebelling against Israel as part of the "popular  resistance." 
The Palestinians have recently begun claiming  that Israel is falsifying stabbing attacks, and that once innocent  Palestinians are killed, Israeli security forces plant evidence and  stage scenes. 
The visual expression of this allegation was  illustrated in a cartoon strip published this week by Al-Hayat  Al-Jadida, the Palestinian Authority's official newspaper, depicting a  knife attached to the barrel of an Israeli soldier's rifle. The knife  cuts through the hand of a Palestinian man, and the soldier then pulls  the rifle away, leaving the impression that the Palestinian is  brandishing the knife at the soldier, who is depicted yelling,  "Terrorist!"
In a run-down of recent events, Ramallah's  official TV station went further, reporting that "in a fit of hysteria  and madness against our defenseless youth, the occupation government's  police forces are executing our children and youth in cold blood, simply  because they arouse suspicion. [Israel] then makes them look guilty and  falsifies evidence, to justify its actions to the world. The killing of  children over nothing but suspicions makes for painful scenes, and even  the greatest directors in Hollywood would find them difficult to stage,  but the Zionists skillfully stage them."
This report is not unusual. Moreover, the  slanderous accusations leveled at Israel are juxtaposed by the  glorification of the terrorists and their actions.
The examples are many: The Palestinian  Education Ministry plants trees to honor the "shahids"; Fatah recently  posted a birth certificate of a baby boy named "Knife of Jerusalem" on  its Facebook page; Fatah's Twitter account described stabbing attacks as  "a symphony of love for Al-Quds" [Jerusalem]"; and Fatah even had soil  transferred from Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem to the gravesite of the  terrorist who murdered two Israelis near the Old City's Lions' Gate last  month, "so the shahid can embrace the land for which he died a martyr's  death." The list goes on.
The terminology of Abbas' rhetoric is also  interesting: He speaks of "executions" but never bothers to mention that  those killed were carrying, or attempting to carry out, terrorist  attacks. Moreover, Abbas has threatened to seek International Criminal  Court action against Israel over these so-called "executions." 
Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat also  speaks of the "execution of innocent Palestinians," and PLO Executive  Committee member Mahmoud Ismail has stated that the murder of settlers  is not only legal, it is "a national Palestinian duty." 
No rhyme and little reason
Since the surge in violence erupted, 70  Palestinians, most of them terrorists, have been killed. On the Israeli  side, 12 people were killed and 127 were wounded, 15 of them seriously.
Profiling the 35 terrorists who carried out  attacks in Jerusalem and other Israeli cities, 24 of whom were killed  and 11 wounded, the Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center found  that 18 of the perpetrators were aged 16 to 20, and 10 of them were  minors, aged 13 to 18. The majority of terrorists are either unemployed  or do not attend school, and they are not affiliated with any known  terrorist organization. 
Analyzing 28 terrorist attacks, ITIC found  that 23 were stabbing attacks, one was a ramming attack, one was a  combined ramming-stabbing attack, two were combined knifing and shooting  attacks, and one was a lethal stoning attack.
The research center also found the majority of  attacks, 19, took place in Jerusalem, and that 21 of the terrorists  were residents of east Jerusalem neighborhoods: Six from Jabel Mukaber,  six from Sur Baher, three from Beit Hanina, three from Kafr Aqab, two  from the Shuafat refugee camp, and one from Al-Ram. Five terrorists were  residents of Hebron and its vicinity. 
"The vast majority of terrorist attacks was  spontaneously carried out by lone terrorists, without actual  premeditation, and using 'cold' weapons, mainly knives and other sharp  objects," the ITIC's report said. 
"The use of knives is widely promoted in the  Palestinian media, and it is possible that it has gained even more  popularity due to the impact videos depicting Islamic State executions  have had."
The report noted that stabbing attacks "have  an 'infectious' effect, given the glorification of the perpetrators in  Palestinian media and the empathy felt for youth who were killed during  such attacks." 
According to the findings, "Both Jerusalem and  Hebron, where the majority of terrorists resided, are two cities  agitated by constant political, social and religious tensions between  Israelis and Palestinians. In contrast, only a small number of Arab  Israelis have taken part in the recent wave of terrorism -- three out of  35." 
The current surge in violence is characterized  "by terrorists devoid of any specific ideology, orderly plan or a  political directing hand. Some exhibited Islamist inclinations, such as  wanting to become shahids, or expressing a willingness to die for the  liberation of Al-Aqsa mosque, but that does not necessarily indicate  they were affiliated with Hamas or any other Islamist group."
ITIC further concluded that so far, none of the  terrorists who carried out attacks in recent weeks were inspired by  Islamic State, or any other Salafi ideology. The majority of them had no  previous records, and only two had been previously imprisoned in  Israel."
      Nadav Shragai
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=29483
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 


