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For two days Israel targeted militants in Jenin. What did it achieve?

Israel’s 48-hour incursion of hundreds of troops this week into the northern West Bank city of Jenin, which has emerged as a potent stronghold for Palestinian militant groups, left behind some telling images. What they promised for the future was not security for anyone, but escalation and a deadly cycle of violence that evoked comparisons among some observers to Gaza.

Families are now returning to smashed homes and rubble-strewn streets left by receding Israeli forces after their largest incursion into the West Bank in two decades. The raid displaced thousands of residents from the targeted refugee camp, with more than 140 injured.

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In the name of security, Israel has fought Hamas again and again in Gaza. Now, the largest Israeli incursion in the West Bank in two decades, targeting popular young militants in Jenin, seems to be paving the way only for more clashes.

At a funeral Tuesday for some of the dozen young militants killed in the battle, angry mourners chased away two Palestinian Authority representatives who arrived to express their condolences.

“In the short term [the operation] may change things a little – degrade the local capabilities of the militants,” says Amos Harel, defense analyst for Haaretz newspaper. “But even the most optimistic officials and analysts admit [that the operation] doesn’t change things fundamentally.”

Palestinian morale remains high. “The most important thing was the camp fought back,” says Alaa Salah, whose house was destroyed. “What matters is that the shabab [militants] survived and are safe.”

Israel’s 48-hour incursion of hundreds of troops this week into the northern West Bank city of Jenin, which has emerged as a potent stronghold for Palestinian militant groups, left behind some telling images.

What they promised for the future was not security for anyone, but escalation and a deadly cycle of violence that in recent years had been alien to the once-stable West Bank and that evoked comparisons among some observers to Gaza.

They also highlighted the increasing irrelevance and ineffectiveness of a Palestinian Authority caught between growing support for armed groups at home and an intransigent far-right government in Israel.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

In the name of security, Israel has fought Hamas again and again in Gaza. Now, the largest Israeli incursion in the West Bank in two decades, targeting popular young militants in Jenin, seems to be paving the way only for more clashes.

Families are now returning to smashed homes and rubble-strewn streets left by receding Israeli forces after the largest Israeli military incursion into the West Bank in two decades. The raid displaced thousands of residents from the targeted refugee camp, with more than 140 injured.

At a funeral Tuesday for some of the dozen young militants killed in the battle, which involved Israeli drone strikes and ground forces, angry mourners chased away two senior Fatah and Palestinian Authority (PA) representatives who arrived to express their condolences.

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