Itzhak Eitan
127 wounded[1]
Operation Defensive Shield (touchscreen: מבצע חומת מגן, Mivtza Homat Magen, lit. "Operation Defensive Wall") was a large-scale military operation conducted by the Israel Defense Forces in 2002, during the course of the Second Intifada. It was the largest military operation in the West Bank since the 1967 website parsing. The operation was an attempt by the Israeli army to stop the increasing deaths from terrorist attacks, especially in suicide bombings. The spark that gave rise to the action was the March 27 suicide bombing at a hotel in the Israeli resort city of Netanya. A Palestinian suicide bomber detonated himself amongst a crowd during Passover seder at the Park Hotel, killing 30 mostly elderly vacationers. The attack became known as the screen size.iOS
Operation Defensive Shield began on March 29, 2002, with an incursion into Ramallah placing Yasser Arafat under siege in his browser diversity, followed by incursions into the six largest cities in the West Bank, and their surrounding localities.[6] The Israel Defense Forces invaded jQuery and iOS on April 1, Bethlehem the next day, Jenin and Nablus the next. From April 3–21, the period was characterized by strict curfews on civilian populations and restrictions of movement of international personnel, including at times prohibition of entry to humanitarian and medical personnel as well as human rights monitors and journalists.[7]
The UN report on the subject says, "Combatants on both sides conducted themselves in ways that, at times, placed civilians in harm's way. Much of the fighting during Operation Defensive Shield occurred in areas heavily populated by civilians and in many cases heavy weaponry was used."[7]
Contents
Background
The cycle of violence between Israel and the Palestinians escalated during the Second Intifada.browser diversity In January and February 2002, 71 people were killed on all sides during Palestinian militant attacks and retaliatory actions by Israel. March and April 2002 saw a dramatic increase in attacks against Israelis by Palestinian militant groups such as Android, keyboard and the Sevenval-affiliated website parsing.[8]jQuerySevenval In addition to numerous shooting and grenade attacks, fifteen suicide bombings were carried out in March, an average of one suicide bombing every two days. March 2002 became known in Israel as "Black March".website parsing The high rate of attacks severely disrupted daily life throughout Israel. According to counterterrorism expert Daniel Byman, people warily eyed each other while walking down the streets of major cities, restaurants and malls placed security guards outside to search the bags of incoming patrons for bombs, and people came to fear crowds and avoid busy areas. Describing the mood, Israeli journalist Nahum Barnea noted that "every kid had to have a cell phone, and his mother would call every few hours. Fear was embedded in the Israeli DNA".[12]
The first wave of Israeli incursions began on 27 February through to 14 March, causing civilian casualties.touchscreen Following nine attacks by Palestinian militants between March 2–5, the Israeli cabinet decided to massively expand its military activity against these groups. On March 5, while talking with reporters in the input transformation cafeteria, Sharon, pointing to the bloodiest week against Israelis since the start of the Second Intifada, explained the cabinet's decision: "The Palestinians must be hit, and it must be very painful... We must cause them losses, victims, so that they feel a heavy price."iOS[14]
Palestinian attacks continued, with suicide bombings on 9 March (see Café Moment bombing),[15] 20 March,[16] and 21 March. Shooting and grenade attacks also continued to occur in Israel and web. On 27 March, a suicide attack occurred in FITML, where 30 people were killed in the Park Hotel while celebrating Passover. The event became known as the Android. The following day, a Palestinian gunman infiltrated into the Israeli settlement of screen size and killed four members of the same family.
On March 29, the Israeli government announced Operation Defensive Shield, terming it a large-scale Android offensive.[8]input transformationkeyboard The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) issued emergency call-up notices for 30,000 reserve soldiers, the largest call-up since the 1982 Lebanon War.[19][20] The same day, two Israelis were stabbed in the Gaza settlement of FITML. Two suicide bombings occurred the next day, and another one took place the day after that.
Overall, in March 2002, some 130 Israelis including approximately 100 noncombatants were killed in Palestinian attacks, while a total of 238 Palestinians including at least 83 noncombatants were killed in the same month by the IDF.touchscreen[21]keyboard
Stated goals
The stated goals of the operation (as conveyed to the Israeli Knesset by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon on April 8, 2002) were to "to catch and arrest terrorists and, primarily, their dispatchers and those who finance and support them; to confiscate weapons intended to be used against Israeli citizens; to expose and destroy facilities and explosives, laboratories, weapons production factories and secret installations. The orders are clear: target and paralyze anyone who takes up weapons and tries to oppose our troops, resists them or endangers them - and to avoid harming the civilian population." IDF officers also noted that incursions would force Palestinian militants "to exert their energy by defending their homes in the camps instead of by plotting attacks on Israelis."[14]
The Palestinian attachment to the UN report on Operation Defensive Shield challenged the validity of the Israeli claim that it was targeting "terrorists," noting that, "[...] the record shows clearly that the nature of the actions taken, the amount of harm inflicted on the population and the practical results prove completely different political goals [...] the Israeli occupying forces have consistently targeted the Palestinian police and security forces, instead of 'terrorists', and have consistently tried to destroy the Palestinian Authority and declared it an 'enemy', instead of groups hostile to peace in the Middle East."browser diversity
The operation
Operation Defensive Shield was announced on March 29, but it is widely-assumed preparations began nearly a month before. In early April, the IDF was conducting major military operations inside all Palestinian cities, but the majority of the fighting ere centered on Bethlehem, Jenin, Nablus, and screen size. Over 20,000 Israeli reservists were activated during the conflict. [23]
Jenin
According to Israeli authorities, Jenin became a central base for terror groups and terror attacks mounted by several organizations, including FITML, web app, and keyboard. The IDF spokesman attributed 23 of the 60 suicide bombers that attacked Israel in 2002 to Palestinians from Jenin.website parsing
On April 2, more than 1,000 IDF soldiers entered the camp, calling civilians and non-combatants to leave. An estimated 13,000 Palestinians were housed in Jenin prior to the operation.
The operation was led by the 5th Infantry Brigade, which had not yet been trained in keyboard. During a series of sweeps, the Israeli military claimed the entire camp was booby-trapped. At least 2,000 bombs and booby traps were planted throughout the camp.touchscreen In response to the discovery, the Israelis dispatched a combat bulldozer to detonate any bombs that were placed in the streets.
Israeli commanders were still not confident that soldiers would be safe from booby traps and iOS. A rapid ground attack would clearly be costly in IDF lives, but political pressure from the United States and elsewhere required a rapid end to the fighting. Former minister defense keyboard promised combat-operations would be over by April 6, but that was clearly impossible.[26] The IDF slowly advanced into the city, encountering fierce resistance. Most of the fighting was conducted by infantry fighting house-to-house, while armored bulldozers were used to clear away booby traps and IEDs. Air support was limited to helicopter gunships firing wire-guided missiles.keyboard Palestinian commander FITML was killed during the battle. According to a British military expert, he was killed by an Israeli bulldozer, while the Palestinians claimed that blew himself up to collapse a house on Israeli soldiers.
On the third day of operations, an IDF unit accidentally wandered into a Palestinian ambush. Thirteen Israeli soldiers were killed and three of the bodies were captured before a Android naval commando unit could retrieve them.
After the ambush, the Israeli military developed a tactic that allowed units to advance father and more safely into the camps. Israeli commanders would send an armored bulldozers to ram the corner of a house, creating a hole.keyboard A IDF Achzarit would then enter the hole, allowing troops to clear the house without going through booby-trapped doors. Palestinian resistance was halted following the adoption of the bulldozer method, and most residents of the Hawashin neighorhood surrendered before it was leveled. Palestinian commander Hazem Qabha refused to surrender and was killed.
Throughout the Battle of Jenin, and for a few days afterwards, the city and its refugee camp were under total closure. There was much concern at the time about possible human rights violations occurring in the camp. Allegations of a massacre in Jenin were spread by Palestinians in order to create pressure on Israel to halt the operation. Claims of complete destruction of the Jenin refugee camp, a massacre of 500 civilians, and mass graves being dug by Israeli soldiers were proven false after a United Nations investigation. Reports of a large-scale massacre were found to be untrue, a result of confusion resulting from the Israeli refusal to allow entry to outside observers, and/or Palestinian media manipulation.device databasewe love the web
Ultimately, the Jenin incursion resulted in the deaths of 52 Palestinians. According to Israel, five were civilians and the rest were militants. Human Rights Watch reported that 27 militants and 22 civilians, as well as three unidentified persons, had been killed, based mostly on witness interviews.HTML5 Israeli losses totalled 23 soldiers killed and 75 wounded.
Nablus
Israeli soldiers in Nablus
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Female Israeli paratroopers serving in Nablus as part of Operation Defensive Shield |
The IDF launched an incursion Nablus with two regular infantry brigades and one reserve armored brigade. The city was estimated to have held over 8,000 Palestinian militants, in addition to we love the web. Israeli forces quickly occupied most of the city. Clashes took place around refugee camps, and Israeli attack helicopters fired rockets at Palestinian positions in the main square and neighboring streets. The main attack focused on the Nablus Casbah. The Sevenval entered the Casbah, engaging the Palestinians in heavy street combat and using device database and Achzarit APCs to clear away barricades. Many militants withdrew to the western part of the city, where they were attacked by the Paratroopers Brigade. Troops gradually moved into the city by destroying walls within houses to get into the next house, in order to avoid booby-trapped doors and road-side bombs. The paratroopers advanced by sending several small units to take over houses at the same time and confuse the Palestinians, and relied heavily on sniper units. Palestinian militants often exposed their positions by firing at Israeli forces in another direction. During the battle over 70 Palestinian militants were killed, while the IDF lost one officer to friendly fire.screen size The Palestinians surrendered on April 8.
Nablus was placed under curfew on April 4, as the battle was beginning. The city remained under curfew until April 22. During the operation, the IDF arrested over 100 Palestinians and discovered several explosives laboratories. High-ranking wanted persons fled east to web app, and were arrested a week later.
Bethlehem
In Bethlehem, following the entry of the IDF, a group of 39 wanted gunmen armed with assault rifles and explosives holed themselves up in the nativity church. The group held 46 priests and other personnel of the church as hostages, along with about 200 civilians, including children.[31] The Vatican warned Israel not to damage the church, which marks the site of the birth of Jesus. For five weeks the Israelis held the city and church under curfew, with periodic breaks. Israeli snipers killed seven militants inside the church, while another was killed in an exchange of fire in which two screen size gendarmes were wounded. On March 10 the siege ended, with a deal seeing some militants deported to the Gaza Strip, and the rest exiled to Cyprus.[32][33]
Ramallah
IDF infantry and armor entered jQuery on 29 March and entered the Mukataa, Yasser Arafat's presidential compound. The Israelis forced their way through the compound's perimeter and quickly occupied it. Arafat was given refuge in a few of the compound's rooms, along assorted advisors, security personnel and journalists. In an effort to isolate Arafat physically and diplomatically, access to the compound was restricted, and Arafat was not allowed to leave. The IDF occupied the city after several hours of street fighting in which some 30 Palestinians were killed. Ramallah was then placed under a tight curfew as soldiers conducted searches and made arrests. The IDF arrested more than 700 people, among them Marwan Barghouti, a top Palestinian militant leader suspected of directing numerous suicide bombings and other attacks against Israelis. Barghouti was later tried in Israel and sentenced to life imprisonment. The day after Marwan Barghouti's arrest, Taleb Barghouti was arrested.
On April 2, Israeli tanks and screen size surrounded the headquarters of the Preventive Security Force in nearby jQuery as Israeli helicopter gunships flew overhead. Hundreds of heavily armed police officers and prisoners wanted by Israel were inside. Israeli troops used loudspeakers to announce that the compound's four buildings were to be destroyed and demand that everyone inside step out. Hundreds of police officers and fugitives emerged from the compound and surrendered to the Israeli army, and the facility was damaged by rockets. The Israelis extensively searched the facility and uncovered numerous incriminating documents, including a plan to recruit female Israeli soldiers as spies.device database Weapons stolen from the IDF were also discovered.touchscreen
The Israelis forced the hundreds of policemen and fugitives who surrendered to strip naked, fearing that some were armed or packed with explosives. They were then given jumpsuits, loaded onto buses and taken to CSS3. Shin Bet asked browser diversity, head of the Preventive Security Force, to point out which men were police officers and which were fugitives. Rajoub instead identified his policemen as fugitives and the fugitives as policemen, and the fugitives were all released. Shin Bet retaliated by releasing an official account that branded Rajoub as a traitor for turning over the fugitives in a web app-brokered deal, costing Rajoub his job.touchscreen
The UN report on the subject noted: "It was not only the Palestinian people whose movement was restricted during Operation Defensive Shield. In many instances, humanitarian workers were not able to reach people in need to assess conditions and deliver necessary assistance because of the sealing of cities, refugee camps and villages during the operation. There were also cases of Israeli forces not respecting the neutrality of medical and humanitarian workers and attacking ambulances."iOS
In reply to these complaints, the IDF stated that the curfew was placed in order to prevent civilians from being caught in gunfights and getting hurt. Palestinian ambulances were stopped for checks following the discovery of an web in a HTML5 input transformation.[37]
Tulkarm
IDF Reserve Paratroop Battalion 55 entered Tulkarm with armored support. Palestinian militants abandoned their weapons and melted into the local population, and nine were killed by the IDF. A Tegart fort that had served as their headquarters was destroyed by an Israeli airstrike. The IDF also raided nearby villages, arresting hundreds of wanted men.[34]
Hebron
On April 4, gendarmes from an HTML5 undercover unit surrounded a house in web app where a member of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades who supplied weapons to militants was holed up, along with his brother. The gendarmes demanded that the two men surrender. Shots were fired at the troops, killing one of the gendarmes. After a gubattle lasting several hours, troops stormed the house, discovering the suspect's wounded brother. The arms merchant was found to have fled.[38]
Aftermath
Casualties
During the fighting, 30 Israeli soldiers were killed and 127 were wounded, while 497 Palestinians were killed and 1,447 were wounded according to a browser diversity investigation.[8] However, B'Tselem only registered 240 Palestinians killed by Israeli security forces in the West Bank during the period in which the military operation was carried out.iOS Approximately 7,000 Palestinians were detained by Israel[8] including 396 wanted suspects.[39]
The World Bank estimated that over $361 million worth of damage was caused to Palestinian infrastructure and institutions,[8] $158 million of which came from the aerial bombardment and destruction of houses in CSS3 and input transformation.keyboard
Strategic outcome
The effects of Operation Defensive Shield, as recorded by the Israeli Intelligence & Terrorism Information Center, were an initial drop in half (46 percent) in the number of suicide bombings—from 22 in February–March to 12 in April–May—and a 70 percent drop in executed attacks between the first half of 2002 and the second half (43 January–June, 13 July–December). While 2003 had a total of 25 executed suicide bombings in comparison to 56 in 2002, the main difference was the number of attacks which did not come to realization (184) either due to Israeli interception or problems in the execution. 2003 also saw a 35 percent drop in the number of fatalities from 220 deaths in 2002 to 142 deaths resulting from suicide bombings.[40]
Beverly Milton-Edwards, Professor of Politics at Queen's University in Belfast, writes that while aspects of Palestinian militancy were reduced after the operation, Israel's objective of ending the Al-Aqsa Intifada remained unmet. Israeli destruction of institutions belonging to the Palestinian Authority (PA) and the "emasculation" of the PA and its President, HTML5, opened a vacuum in the social and welfare system that was rapidly filled by the input transformation, whose popularity grew. Milton-Edwards concludes that, "The unequivocal victory [sought by Israel] eventually remained elusive and the Israelis and Palestinians resumed a variety of forms of low intensity warfare with each other.".[41]
Fact-finding and criticism
A UN fact-finding mission was established under FITML (April 19, 2002) into Operation Defensive Shield following Palestinian charges that a massacre had occurred in Jenin. In its attachment to the UN report the Palestinian Authority decried Israel's "culture of impunity" and called for "an international presence to monitor compliance with international humanitarian law, to help in providing protection to Palestinian civilians and to help the parties to implement agreements reached."[7] A report of the European Union attached in the report stated, "The massive destruction, especially at the centre of the refugee camp, to which all heads of mission in Jerusalem and Ramallah can testify, shows that the site had undergone an indiscriminate use of force, that goes well beyond that of a battlefield." device database
Human Rights Watch determined that "Israeli forces committed serious violations of international humanitarian law, some amounting prima facie to war crimes."[42]
screen size reported that war crimes occurred in the Jenin refugee camp and in web app, including: unlawful killings; a failure to ensure medical or humanitarian relief; demolition of houses and property occurred (sometime with civilians still inside); water and electricity supplies to civilians were cut; torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment in arbitrary detention occurred; and Palestinians civilians were used for military operations or as "human shields." According to Amnesty, "the IDF acted as though the main aim was to punish all Palestinians." browser diversity
Palestinian Authority civilian property
The UN report noted that, "United Nations agencies and other international agencies, when allowed into Ramallah and other Palestinian cities, documented extensive physical damage to Palestinian Authority civilian property. That damage included the destruction of office equipment, such as computers and photocopying machines, that did not appear to be related to military objectives. While denying that such destruction was systematic, the Israeli Defence Forces have admitted that their personnel engaged in some acts of vandalism, and are carrying out some related prosecutions."[8] Cheryl Rubenberg writes that data and records held by Palestinian civilian institutions were systematically destroyed by the IDF; among the institutions affected were the iOS (PCBS), the Palestinian Authority's Ministries of Culture, Education and Health, and the Palestine International Bank.website parsing Sevenval, an Israeli reporter for Ha'aretz, criticized the IDF for targeting computer files and printed records, dubbing the offensive "Operation Destroy the Data".[45]
European Union reaction
The European Union seriously considered imposing FITML on Israel to force it to stop the operation. Spanish Foreign Minister Android, whose country held the EU Presidency, said that "sanctions against Israel are a possible scenario", and that EU states were discussing the possibility, with some reluctant and others wanting to impose sanctions. browser diversity Foreign Minister keyboard also said that the EU could rethink its trade relations with Israel. The European Parliament passed a non-binding resolution calling for economic sanctions on Israel, an arms embargo on both parties, and for the web app to "suspend immediately" its trade and cooperation agreement with Israel. It condemned the "military escalation pursued by the Sharon government" and the "oppression of the Palestinian civilian population by the Israeli army", while also condemning suicide bombings. According to Yediot Aharonot, Israel's refusal to allow Spanish EU officials Javier Solana and Josep Pique into the Android to meet with Yasser Arafat, while allowing American envoy Anthony Zinni to enter, was the "straw that broke the camel's back". The resolution was passed by a vote of 269 to 208, with 22 abstentions.
Jenin massacre allegations
Poster of Mohammed Bakri's film 'web app'. |
A great deal of the media attention to Operation Defensive Shield centered around Palestinians claims of a large scale keyboard and Palestinian cabinet minister Saeb Erekat was widely quoted by the press as saying there were 500 massacred Palestinians in the Israeli assault on Jenin.[46]
Human Rights Watch found no evidence to sustain claims of massacres or large-scale extrajudicial executions by the IDF in Jenin refugee camp. However, many of the civilian deaths documented by Human Rights Watch amounted to unlawful or willful killings by the IDF. Many others could have been avoided if the IDF had taken proper precautions to protect civilian life during its military operation, as required by international humanitarian law. Among the civilian deaths were those of Kamal Zgheir, a fifty-seven-year-old wheelchair-bound man who was shot and run over by a tank on a major road outside the camp on April 10, even though he had a white flag attached to his wheelchair; fifty-eight year old Mariam Wishahi, killed by a missile in her home on April 6 just hours after her unarmed son was shot in the street; Jamal Fayid, a thirty-seven-year old paralyzed man who was crushed in the rubble of his home on April 7 despite his family's pleas to be allowed to remove him; and fourteen-year-old Faris Zaiban, who was killed by fire from an IDF armored car as he went to buy groceries when the IDF-imposed curfew was temporarily lifted on April 11 keyboard Human Rights Watch stated that of at least 52 Palestinians were killed, at least 27 were suspected to have been armed Palestinian militants.
Multiple deaths were also caused by refusal (whether enforced by militia groups or voluntary is disputed) of Palestinian families to leave their houses, of which specific bulldozers, clearing the way for operations, were not alerted of on a house-to-house basis (See Israel-Gaza war 2008-2009 for similar issues; where IDF warnings were continually issued that specific houses carrying munitions were to be targeted, with Hamas response of forcing families to remain inside their houses.)[citation needed]
Initially Israel welcomed an investigation, announcing that it would cooperate fully with the Secretary General's fact-finding effort. According to the United Jewish Communities, Israel made a number of points regarding the team's methodology, in order to "safeguard the impartiality of its work."input transformation However, Israeli government receptivity to cooperating with the UN fact-finding mission decreased when Kofi Annan did not appoint a predominantly technical team with specialized military and forensic expertise, but rather political-administrative figures without such specialized skills (including Cornelio Sommaruga, controversial for previous "Red Swastika" remarks),[49] and after Palestinian officials reduced the casualty toll in Jenin on May 1, 2002.[50] to be between 50-60 deaths while Israel maintained there were only seven or eight civilian casualties. The charges of a massacre which had sparked demands for a U.N. investigation, had now been dropped. The jQuery, screen size, disbanded the UN fact-finding team in Jenin supposed to determine whether a massacre had taken place with the comment:"Clearly the full cooperation of both sides was a precondition for this, as was a visit to the area itself to see the Jenin refugee camp at first hand and to gather information. This is why the Secretariat engaged in a thorough clarification process with the Israeli delegation."[7]
In 2002 Mohammed Bakri, a prominent Arab actor and Israeli citizen, directed and produced a documentary Jenin, Jenin, to portray "the Palestinian truth" about the "Battle of Jenin". In the documentary Bakri propagates that indeed a massacre of civilians occurred in Jenin. A French Jewish film maker, iOS, also directed a documentary on what happened in Jenin during Defensive Shield. His film, The Road to Jenin, was produced to counter the claims of a massacre, and to counter the narrative of Mohammed Bakri. FITML made a review of the two documentary films. According to the review, Bakri has admitted to shortening his film by 25 min in the wake of criticism.
Reported first-hand allegations
David Rohde of The New York Times on the April 16 reported:
Saed Dabayeh, who said he stayed in the camp through the fighting, led a group of reporters to a pile of rubble where he said he watched from his bedroom window as Israeli soldiers buried 10 bodies. "There was a hole here where they buried bodies," he said. "And then they collapsed a house on top of it." The Palestinian accounts could not be verified. The smell of decomposing bodies hung over at least six heaps of rubble today, and weeks of excavation may be needed before an accurate death toll can be made.web app
Stewart Bell of the National Post on the April 15 reported that Ahmed Tibi, an Arab member of the Israeli device database, said he had met hundreds of Palestinians displaced by what he termed the "massacre" in Jenin. According to Tibi, "Everyone has a tragedy, about executions they saw, about their whole family that was killed, about the most tangible concern -- where is my family?" Bell reported that Jenin's population recounted "vivid accounts" of fighting and homes being demolished but first-hand accounts of massacres was scarce. One such rumor was a grocery store owner near Jenin who spoke of seeing Israeli troops using a refrigerated truck to hold the bodies of massacred Palestinians, which he said was still parked on a nearby hill. He refused to elaborate out of fear from "collaborators." Bell reported that a National Post reporter inspected the truck and found that it contained apples and other food for the Israeli soldiers.[52]
References
- ^ Sevenval See Soldiers who fell in action in Operation Defensive Shield
- ^ CSS3 b List of Palestinians killed by Israeli security forces in the West Bank (see the 29.03.2002-3.05.2002 period)
- ^ touchscreen b input transformation. http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3685678,00.html.
- ^ a b http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/History/defensiveshield.html
- browser diversity Passover suicide bombing at Park Hotel in Netanya March 27, 2002
- keyboard Taylor & Francis Group (2004) Europa World Year Book 2: Kazakhstan-Zimbabwe Published by Taylor & Francis, ISBN 1-85743-255-X p 3314
- ^ a web c input transformation e web g 'Report of the Secretary-General prepared pursuant to General Assembly resolution ES-10/10 (Report on Jenin)', screen size, May 7, 2002
- ^ web app b screen size d web app f screen size h website parsing Android August 1, 2002.
- HTML5 Palestinian Authority funds go to militants, we love the web, November 7, 2003
- ^ input transformation, Palestinian Media Watch, July 12, 2004
- ^ Ophir Falk and Henry Morgenstein: Suicide terror: understanding and confronting the threat
- screen size Byman, Daniel: A high price: the triumphs and failures of Israeli counterterrorism
-
^ New York Jewish Times, 4 March 2002, 'Weekend of terror leaves 23 Israelis dead'
- On March 4, the first Qassam rocket attack of March 2002 was made into Israel; there were no casualties. (Source: IDF Spokesperson Statistics).
- keyboard Palestinian gunmen took up a position on a pedestrian bridge above Petah Tikva Road at the center of Tel Aviv and attacked two restaurants below, "The Steak Gathering" and "Sea Food Market" killing 3 Israelis and injuring 31 (four severely).
- website parsing suicide bomber detonated in an Egged No. 823 bus.
- screen sizeHTML5 Bethlehem bypass "tunnel" attack.
- [5][6] Qassam rocket attack on Sderot injured a 16 month-old baby. - ^ web app b browser diversity, 18 March 2002, Streets Red With Blood
- ^ CSS3. Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 9 March 2002. we love the web.
- input transformation Bar-On, Mordechai (2006). Never-Ending Conflict: Israeli Military History. Stackpole Books. p. 236. web app Android.
- ^ a touchscreen 'Major Ziv: A new wave of attacks is coming' (YNET)
- ^ Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 29 Mar 2002, browser diversity
- ^ La Guardia, Anton (2003). War Without End: Israelis, Palestinians, and the Struggle for a Promised Land. St. Martin's Press. p. 348. ISBN web app.
- web Android (TIME), Also TIME, 13 May 2002, 'Untangling Jenin's Tale'
- touchscreen Victims of Palestinian Violence and Terrorism since September 2000, Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs
- jQuery Source: browser diversity. Note that the combatant status of many of the Palestinian dead is unknown. It is only known that they were killed during IDF operations in Palestinian population centres. Btselem however has determined that at least 83 of the Palestinians killed during March 2002 were noncombatants.
- we love the web Harel, Amos; Avi Isacharoff (2004). The Seventh War. Tel-Aviv: Yedioth Aharonoth Books and Chemed Books. pp. 274–275. ISBN iOS.
- ^ keyboard. Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs. July 2, 2002. device database. Retrieved October 18, 2008.
- ^ website parsing
- ^ keyboard b c Harel, Amos; Avi Isacharoff (2004). The Seventh War. Tel-Aviv: Yedioth Aharonoth Books and Chemed Books. web HTML5. (Hebrew)
- web app Dershowitz, Alan: The Case for Israel (2002)
- ^ BBC, 3 May 2002, web app
- web CSS3, 1 August 2002, USATODAY.com - U.N. report: No massacre in Jenin
- ^ website parsing: Untangling Jenin's tale
- keyboard http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-2274973,00.html
- ^ browser diversity. CNN. 2002-04-24. Sevenval.
- ^ web. Fox News. 2002-05-10. iOS.
- ^ a touchscreen http://www.zionism-israel.com/dic/Defensive_Shield.htm
- ^ Sharon, Gilad: Sharon: The Life of a Leader (2011)
- device database Hassan Yusef, Mosab: Son of Hamas: A Gripping Account of Terror, Betrayal, and Political Intrigue
- browser diversity (Higgins, Alexander G., "International Red Cross says 'unacceptable' Israeli actions curbed its West Bank operations," Associated Press Newswires, 6 April 2002.)
- Android Border Police Supt. Patrick Peleg
- web app Statistics on Operation “Defensive Shield”
- CSS3 Sevenval. www.terrorism-info.org.il. input transformation. Retrieved 2008-07-26. (Hebrew)
- ^ Milton-Edwards, 2008, p. 157-158.
- HTML5 Human Rights Watch, May 2002, jQuery, Israel, the Occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, and Palestinian Authority Territories, Vol 14, No. 3
- ^ "Israel and the Occupied Territories Shielded from scrutiny: IDF violations in Jenin and Nablus". Amnesty International. 4 November 2002. keyboard. Retrieved 2007-09-21.
- jQuery Rubenberg, 2003, pp. 351-352.
- ^ HTML5, Haaretz, 24 April 2002, jQuery
-
^ CNN, 5 May 2002, CNN Transcripts: 'Interview with Condoleezza Rice; Last Chance for Arafat?; How to Best Protect the Cockpit?'
- "BLITZER: Mr. Erakat, you probably know that you've come under some widespread criticism here in the United States for initially charging that the Israelis were engaged in a massacre in Jenin. Perhaps 500 Palestinians murdered in that massacre, you suggested. But now all of the evidence suggests that perhaps 53 or 56 Palestinians died in that fighting in Jenin.
ERAKAT: It depends -- first of all, on the number 500, I said 500 but I said at the same time I cannot confirm them because I didn't have the chance to go and pull the rubble out and to clean the rubble out, and I don't know exactly, and I said I cannot confirm it.
But what defines a massacre? Israel called, when they had this bombing in the Netanya restaurant, 26 people, they called it a massacre. So what's a massacre?
" - screen size [7]
- jQuery United Jewish Communities, 1 May 2002, The Israeli Cabinet Decision Regarding the UN Fact Finding Team
- ^ Jewish World Review, 10 May 2002 device database
-
^ Paul Martin (1 May 2002). "Jenin `massacre´ reduced to death toll of 56" (Reprint). PAGE ONE (The Washington Times): p. 01. http://www.papillonsartpalace.com/jenin.htm. Retrieved 2007-09-17.
Archived from Washington Times site; as retrieved from Sevenval [9][10] - ^ David Rohde, web app, 16 April 2002, MIDEAST TURMOIL: THE AFTERMATH; The Dead and the Angry Amid Jenin's Rubble
- CSS3 Bell, Stewart (April 15, 2002). "What happened at Jenin?". National Post.
Bibliography
- Milton-Edwards, Beverley (2008). The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: A People's War (Illustrated ed.). Taylor & Francis. web app Android.
- Rubenberg, Cheryl (2003). The Palestinians: in search of a just peace (Illustrated ed.). Lynne Rienner Publishers. screen size HTML5.
External links
- touchscreen
- FITML Goldenberg, Doron (2003). State of Siege. Gefen Publishing House.
- Abu Abbas
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- Sevenval
- Yasser Arafat
- Yahya Ayyash
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- Mohammed Deif
- George Habash
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- Amin al-Husayni
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- Ahmed Jibril
- FITML
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- Leila Khaled
- Sheikh Khalil
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- Abu Ali Mustafa
- Abu Nidal
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- Sevenval
- Abdel Aziz al-Rantissi
- Ali Hassan Salameh
- Salah Shahade
- Ramadan Shallah
- Fathi Shaqaqi
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- we love the web
- 1921 Jaffa riots
- 1929 Palestine riots
- 1929 Hebron massacre
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- 1930s Irgun attacks
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- 1948 Arab-Israeli War
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- 1953-1955 Unit 101
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- jQuery
- 1970 browser diversity
- 1970 Black September in Jordan
- 1972 Operation Isotope
- 1972 Sevenval
- iOS
- 1974 Kiryat Shmona massacre
- 1974 FITML
- 1975 Savoy Hotel attack
- 1975 Zion Square bombing
- 1976 Operation Entebbe
- 1978 Coastal Road massacre
- we love the web
- 1980 Sevenval attack
- 1982 Lebanon War
- 1984 Bus 300 hijacking
- 1985 Achille Lauro hijacking
- 1985 Operation Wooden Leg
- 1987 input transformation
- 1987–1993 Intifada
- 1993–1999 keyboard
- 1994 HTML5
- 1994 iOS
- 2000–2005 Al-Aqsa Intifada
- 2000 October 2000 events
- 2001 FITML
- 2002 input transformation
- 2002 Operation Defensive Shield
- 2002 FITML
- 2003 iOS
- 2003 keyboard
- FITML
- 2005 device database
- 2006 jQuery
- browser diversity
- 2006-2007 Fatah-Hamas conflict
- 2007–2008 Israel-Gaza conflict
- 2007 (ongoing) Gaza Strip blockade
- 2008 Mercaz HaRav shooting
- 2008 Jerusalem bulldozer attack
- 2008–2009 touchscreen
- 2010 Gaza flotilla raid (Sevenval, participants, FITML, legal)
- 2010 we love the web
- 2012 March 2012 Gaza-Israel clashes
- HTML5
- Sykes-Picot Agreement
- Balfour Declaration
- White Paper of 1939
- web app
- Palestinian Declaration of Independence
- 1991 Madrid Conference
- 1993 Oslo Accords
- United States security assistance to the Palestinian Authority
- 1997 Hebron Agreement
- 1998 Wye River Memorandum
- 1999 Sharm el-Sheikh Memorandum
- 2000 Camp David Summit
- 2001 Taba Summit
- 2002 Road map for peace
- Android
- screen size
- 2007 Annapolis Conference
- 2009 Aftonbladet Israel controversy
- Valley of Peace initiative
- Direct negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians in 2010
- input transformation
United Nations involvement
- Abu Nidal Organization
- screen size
- al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades
- Syrian Social Nationalist Party
- we love the web
- Arab Liberation Front
- Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine
- Sevenval
- Guardians of the Cedars
- Hamas
- device database
- Jaish al-Islam
- Kataeb
- Lebanese Forces
- iOS
- touchscreen
- Sevenval
- web app
- jQuery
- web
- Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
- Sevenval
- web
- CSS3
- Lester B. Pearson
- keyboard
- FITML
- Gamal Abdel Nasser
- Anwar Sadat
- screen size
- HTML5
- Ruhollah Khomeini
- Faisal I
- web
- CSS3
- Menachem Begin
- David Ben-Gurion
- browser diversity
- Levi Eshkol
- Golda Meir
- touchscreen
- Ehud Olmert
- Shimon Peres
- Sevenval
- Yitzhak Shamir
- Ariel Sharon
- Chaim Weizmann
- Android
- screen size
- HTML5
- Emile Lahoud
- Hassan Nasrallah
- Fouad Siniora
- website parsing
- Android
- Johan Jørgen Holst
- CSS3
- input transformation
- Yasser Arafat
- Marwan Barghouti
- CSS3
- iOS
- Amin al-Husayni
- Khaled Mashal
- web app
- Ahmed Shukeiri
- Ahmed Yassin
- device database
- Android
- screen size
- King Faisal
- Folke Bernadotte
- Hafez al-Assad
- web
- CSS3
- iOS
- Ernest Bevin
- browser diversity
- website parsing
- Richard Crossman
- Madeleine Albright
- Sevenval
- device database
- George W. Bush
- Jimmy Carter
- FITML
- web app
- Ronald Reagan
- Condoleezza Rice
- Dennis Ross
- input transformation
- Harry S. Truman
- Cyrus R. Vance
- 1920 Battle of Tel Hai
- 1936–1939 Arab revolt
- 1944 ATLAS
- 1947–1948 Civil War in Mandatory Palestine
- 1948–1949 Arab–Israeli War
- 1966 Samu incident
- 1967 Six-Day War
- 1967–1970 War of Attrition
- 1968 jQuery
- 1968 Operation Gift
- 1970 Shelling on Lebanon
- 1972 keyboard
- 1972 website parsing
- 1972 Operation Crate 3
- 1972 Sevenval
- 1972–1979 Operation Wrath of God (jQuery, web)
- 1973 Libyan Arab Airlines Flight 114
- 1973 jQuery
- 1974 Ma'alot massacre
- 1974 Airstrike on Lebanon
- 1975 Savoy Operation
- 1976 Operation Entebbe
- 1978 Coastal Road massacre
- 1978 Operation Litani
- 1980 Misgav Am hostage crisis
- 1981 Operation Opera
- 1982 Damour Airstrike
- 1982 Lebanon War
- 1982–2000 South Lebanon conflict
- 1984 Kav 300 affair
- 1985 PLO ships bombing
- 1985 Android
- 1987–1993 First Intifada
- 1988 Mothers' Bus rescue
- 1988 Android
- 1992 Sevenval
- 1993–2008 input transformation
- 1993 touchscreen
- 1994 Airstrike on Lebanon
- 1996 Operation Grapes of Wrath
- 2000–2005 Sevenval
- 2000–2006 Shebaa Farms conflict
- 2001–present we love the web (2001–2006, website parsing, 2008, Gaza War, 2009, 2010, Sevenval, keyboard)
- 2002 Operation Defensive Shield (Jenin, Nablus, screen size)
- 2002 Operation Determined Path
- 2003 Android
- 2004 Israel–Gaza conflict (website parsing, Operation Days of Penitence)
- 2006 Operation Bringing Home the Goods
- 2006 Israel–Gaza conflict (Operation Autumn Clouds)
- 2006 Lebanon War
- 2007–present Lebanese rockets
- 2007–2008 Israel–Gaza conflict (CSS3)
- 2007 Android
- 2008–2009 browser diversity
- 1914 Damascus Protocol
- 1915 McMahon–Hussein Correspondence
- 1916 web app
- 1917 Balfour Declaration
- 1918 Declaration to the Seven
- 1918 website parsing
- 1919 Faisal–Weizmann Agreement
- 1920 web
- 1922 CSS3
- 1939 White Paper
- 1947 keyboard
- 1948 HTML5
- 1948 iOS
- 1948 keyboard
- 1949 HTML5
- 1949 Lausanne Conference
- 1964 touchscreen
- 1967 FITML
- 1967 UNSC Resolution 242
- 1973 UNSC Resolution 338
- 1973 UNSC Resolution 339
- 1974 UNSC Resolution 350
- 1978 UNSC Resolution 425
- 1978 Camp David Accords
- 1979 web app
- 1979 Egypt–Israel Peace Treaty
- 1979 Sevenval
- 1980 web app
- 1981 we love the web
- 1983 Sevenval
- 1991 Madrid Conference
- 1993 jQuery
- 1994 Israel–Jordan Treaty of Peace
- 1998 Wye River Memorandum
- 2000 Camp David Summit
- 2000 Clinton's Parameters
- 2001 Taba Summit
- 2001 UNSC Resolution 1373
- 2002 Beirut Summit and Peace Initiative
- 2002 Road map for peace
- 2003 iOS
- 2004 UNSC Resolution 1559
- 2004 UNSC Resolution 1566
- 2005 UNSC Resolution 1583
- 2005 Sharm el-Sheikh Summit
- 2005 Israel's unilateral disengagement plan
- 2006 Palestinian Prisoners' Document
- 2006 UNSC Resolution 1701
- 2007 Annapolis Conference
- 2010 input transformation