Netanyahu condemns settler attack on IDF in West Bank
· RTE.ieIsrael's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has condemned Jewish settlers who attacked senior Israeli military officers including Major General Avi Bluth, the head of the army's Central Command in the occupied West Bank.
The Israeli army said that a group of settlers trailed Maj Gen Bluth and other officers in the West Bank city of Hebron on Friday, blocked their exit and hurled abuse at them. It added that five rioters had been arrested.
"All violence directed against IDF officers and soldiers must be dealt with to the fullest extent of the law," the prime minister's office said in a statement.
Some of the crowd yelled "traitor" at Maj Gen Bluth, who had visited Hebron to attend an annual religious event in the city.
Dozens of settlers, some of them masked, hurled stones at Israeli troops and border police yesterday near the occupied West Bank settlement of Itamar, police said.
There has been a surge in settler violence across the occupied West Bank since the 7 October 2023 attack by Hamas militants on southern Israel, which triggered Israel's war in Gaza and a wider conflict on several fronts.
Palestinians have been repeatedly targeted by settlers, who want Israel to annex the West Bank.
The Israeli military is meant to protect the local Palestinians, but Maj Gen Bluth acknowledged in August that the army had failed to safeguard civilians when settlers went on the rampage in one town.
Palestinians have said they are often left to the mercy of the settlers, with soldiers doing little or nothing to stop them.
Some settler youth groups reject the jurisdiction of the Israeli military in areas that they see as under their control and have attacked Israeli forces.
Settler leaders have claimed violence has no place in their movement and have called for offenders to be prosecuted.
Most countries deem Jewish settlements built on land Israel captured in a 1967 war to be illegal. Israel disputes this and claims historical ties to the land. Palestinians want the West Bank as part of a future independent state.