Israeli settlers attack two Palestinian villages in the West Bank

A Palestinian man inspects a burnt truck after an Israeli settlers attack in the village of Beit Lid, east of Tulkarm in the occupied West Bank on November 11, 2025. (AFP)
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A Palestinian man inspects a burnt truck after an Israeli settlers attack in the village of Beit Lid, east of Tulkarm in the occupied West Bank on November 11, 2025. (AFP)
Israeli settlers attack two Palestinian villages in the West Bank
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A Palestinian man inspects parts of a burnt house after an Israeli settlers attack in the village of Beit Lid, east of Tulkarm in the occupied West Bank on November 11, 2025. (AFP)
Israeli settlers attack two Palestinian villages in the West Bank
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A Palestinian man tries to extinguish flames from a burning truck after an Israeli settlers attack in the village of Beit Lid, east of Tulkarm in the occupied West Bank on November 11, 2025. (AFP)
Israeli settlers attack two Palestinian villages in the West Bank
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Israeli settlers place the Israeli flags on the roof of the Shweiki family house, after the Palestinian family was evicted by police from the house they lived in for decades, in east Jerusalem predominantly Arab neighbourhood of Silwan, on November 10, 2025. (AFP)
Israeli settlers attack two Palestinian villages in the West Bank
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Palestinian land owner and a foreign activists speak with Israeli soldiers as they stand by while an Israeli settler (R) grazes his sheep on Palestinian land, in Umm al-Kheir village, located near the Israeli Jewish settlement of Karmel, south of Yatta village some 15 kilometers south the occupied West Bank city of Hebron on November 9, 2025. (AFP)
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Israeli settlers attack two Palestinian villages in the West Bank

Israeli settlers attack two Palestinian villages in the West Bank
  • Settler violence has surged since the war in Gaza erupted two years ago. The attacks have intensified in recent weeks as Palestinians harvest their olive trees in an annual ritual

JERUSALEM: Dozens of masked Israeli settlers attacked a pair of Palestinian villages in the northern West Bank on Tuesday, setting fire to vehicles and other property before clashing with Israeli soldiers sent to halt the rampage, Israeli and Palestinian officials said.
It was the latest in a recent series of violent attacks by young settlers in the West Bank.
Israeli police said four Israelis were arrested in what it described as “extremist violence,” while the Israeli military said four Palestinians were wounded. Police and Israel’s Shin Bet internal security agency said they were investigating.
Videos on social media showed two charred trucks engulfed in flames, with a nearby building on fire. Settler violence has surged since the war in Gaza erupted two years ago. The attacks have intensified in recent weeks as Palestinians harvest their olive trees in an annual ritual.
The UN humanitarian office last week reported more Israeli settler attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank in October than in any other month since it began keeping track in 2006. There were over 260 attacks, the office said.
Earlier on Tuesday, tens of thousands of Israelis attended the funeral of an Israeli soldier whose body had been held in Gaza for 11 years, overflowing and blocking surrounding streets as somber crowds stood with Israeli flags.
The burial of Lt. Hadar Goldin was a moment of closure for his family, which had traveled the world in a public campaign seeking his return. The huge turnout also reflected the importance of the case for the broader public in Israel, where Goldin became a household name during the struggle to bring his remains home.
Hamas returned his remains on Sunday as part of the Trump-brokered ceasefire deal that began last month. The bodies of four hostages taken in the Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, are still in Gaza.
Settler violence in the West Bank

Palestinians and human rights workers accuse the Israeli army and police of failing to halt attacks by settlers. Israel’s government is dominated by West Bank settlers, and the police force is overseen by Cabinet minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, a hard-line settler leader.
In Tuesday’s incident, the army said soldiers initially responded to settler attacks in the villages of Beit Lid and Deir Sharaf. It said the settlers fled to a nearby industrial zone and attacked soldiers sent to the scene and damaged a military vehicle.
Palestinian official Muayyad Shaaban, who heads the government’s Commission against the Wall and Settlements, said the settlers set fire to four dairy trucks, farmland, tin shacks and tents belonging to a local Bedouin community.
He said the attacks were part of a campaign to drive Palestinians from their land and accused Israel of giving the settlers protection and immunity. He called for sanctions against groups that “sponsor and support the colonial settlement terrorism project.”
French President Emmanuel Macron denounced the attacks during his meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Paris on Tuesday.
“Settler violence and the acceleration of settlement projects are reaching new heights, threatening the stability of the West Bank and constituting violations of international law,” he said.
Palestinians in Gaza still struggling to access food
On Tuesday, Gaza’s Health Ministry said the number of Palestinians killed in Gaza has risen to 69,182. Its count — generally considered by independent experts as reliable — does not distinguish between militants and civilians, but the ministry says more than half of those killed were women and children.
Displaced Palestinians in central Gaza say they continue to rely heavily on charity kitchens for their only daily meal, as soaring market prices and the lack of income have left them struggling to afford daily living costs.
Scores of people, most of them children, lined up with empty pots at a charity kitchen in Nuseirat refugee camp on Tuesday waiting to be served rice — the only food available that day.
“The rockets and planes stopped but increasing living costs has been the hardest weapon used against us,” said Mohamed Al-Naqlah, a displaced Palestinian living in Nuseirat.
The latest war began with a Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, when around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, were killed, and 251 people were kidnapped.
Funeral for Israeli soldier held hostage for 11 years after his death
Goldin was 23 when he was killed two hours after a ceasefire took effect in the 2014 war between Israel and Hamas. For years before the 2023 attack, posters with the faces of Goldin and Oron Shaul, another soldier whose body was abducted in the 2014 war, stared down from intersections as their families campaigned for the return of their bodies.
Israel’s military long ago determined that Goldin had been killed based on evidence found in the tunnel where his body was taken, including a blood-soaked shirt and prayer fringes. The military retrieved Shaul’s body in January. On Tuesday, it announced it had dismantled the tunnel shaft where his body was found.
“Hadar, we waited for you 11 years, that’s a long time. A very long time. I honestly can’t explain how we did it,” Goldin’s mother, Leah, said as she stood next to his grave.
Eulogies from Goldin’s siblings, parents, and former fiancee at his funeral never mentioned Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was also prime minister when Goldin was kidnapped and for most of the period since. They continuously thanked the Israeli military, including reserve soldiers, who tirelessly searched for Goldin’s body over the years.
Netanyahu did not attend the funeral, though Israel’s military chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, gave a eulogy on behalf of the military. Benny Gantz, an opposition lawmaker who was the chief of staff during Goldin’s abduction, attended with former military leaders.
For years, Israel had four hostages in Gaza: Goldin, Shaul, and two Israelis with mental health issues who had crossed into Gaza on their own and were held since 2014 and 2015.
All four were returned in the past year. In the 2014 war, over 2,200 Palestinians were killed, including hundreds of civilians, and widespread damage was inflicted on Gaza’s infrastructure. Another 73 people were killed on the Israeli side during 50 days of fighting.


What Al-Sharaa’s White House visit means for US-Syrian relations and Syria’s global standing

What Al-Sharaa’s White House visit means for US-Syrian relations and Syria’s global standing
Updated 32 min 41 sec ago

What Al-Sharaa’s White House visit means for US-Syrian relations and Syria’s global standing

What Al-Sharaa’s White House visit means for US-Syrian relations and Syria’s global standing
  • After years of sanctions and isolation, Washington’s outreach marks a dramatic shift in its approach to Damascus
  • Analysts say Al-Sharaa’s White House debut could redefine Syria’s regional role and reshape decades of strained US ties

LONDON: Nothing perhaps better illustrates the dramatic geopolitical shift underway in the Middle East than the footage that emerged on Sunday of Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa playing basketball with Admiral Brad Cooper, commander of the US military’s Central Command.

The footage, apparently filmed the day before Al-Sharaa’s historic meeting with US President Donald Trump at the White House, was released on social media by Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad Al-Shaibani, along with a simple caption: “Work hard, play harder.”

The Syrian president has certainly been working hard.

It is only 11 months since Bashar Assad was overthrown after 24 years in power — the last 13 of which Syria spent engulfed in a bloody civil war.  (Reuters)

Not that many years ago, the commander of CENTCOM, responsible for all US military operations in the Middle East, had his sights set on Al-Sharaa as a designated terrorist with a $10 million bounty on his head.

Now, here he was shooting hoops with the man CENTCOM had once been under orders to shoot to kill.

It was not the first time Al-Sharaa has rubbed shoulders with a former enemy. In September, he shared a stage at the 2025 Concordia Annual Summit in New York with David Petraeus, the retired US general.

In 2006, Petraeus was commander of the US troops in Iraq who captured Al-Sharaa, then an insurgent, and imprisoned him for five years.

At the summit in September, Petraeus admitted he was “a fan” of his former enemy, adding: “His trajectory from insurgent leader to head of state has been one of the most dramatic political transformations in recent Middle Eastern history.”

It is only 11 months since Bashar Assad was overthrown after 24 years in power — the last 13 of which Syria spent engulfed in a bloody civil war. 

Yet in those 11 months, Syria’s international rehabilitation and the acceptance of Al-Sharaa has been as fast and comprehensive as it has been dramatic.

Monday’s meeting in Washington between Trump and Al-Sharaa was the culmination of months of pragmatic diplomacy by the US and its allies in the region — and of a determination by Al-Sharaa to prove he is a president for all Syrians.

A woman and a child walk beneath electrical cables strung between damaged buildings in the Ain Tarma area, on the eastern outskirts of the capital Damascus. (AFP)

In February, Al-Sharaa’s very first foreign trip as leader was to , where he met with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

In September, Al-Sharaa made history when he became the first Syrian leader to address the UN General Assembly in six decades.

In those 60 years, he said, Syria had fallen “under the rule of a tyrannical regime that ignored the value of the land it ruled, and oppressed a kind and peaceful people.” Now, Syria was “reclaiming its rightful place among the nations of the world.”

He added: “On behalf of the Syrian people, I extend gratitude to all who stood by their cause, who aided them in their tragedy, who welcomed them in their countries, and to all nations and peoples who rejoiced in the victory of the Syrian people’s will, and who stand with them today in their march toward peace and prosperity.”

Particular thanks, he said, went to , Turkiye, Qatar, the US, and the EU.

The following month, Al-Sharaa was back in Riyadh, this time for the Future Investment Initiative conference. At a session attended by the crown prince, Al-Sharaa made no secret of the importance he placed on Saudi support.

People with Syrian flags rally outside of the White House, Monday, Nov. 10, 2025, in Washington. (AP)

“Our first external visit was to because we recognize that the key to the world lies here in the Kingdom,” he said.

The immediate prelude to Monday’s historic meeting in the White House was the removal of Al-Sharaa and his interior minister, Anas Hasan Khattab, from the UN Security Council’s sanctions list targeting Daesh and Al-Qaeda.

In May, Trump announced he planned to lift US sanctions on Syria to “give them a chance at greatness.” 

The sanctions, he said, “were brutal and crippling and served as an important — really an important function — nevertheless, at the time. But now it’s their time to shine … So, I say good luck, Syria. Show us something very special.”

In May, Trump announced he planned to lift US sanctions on Syria to “give them a chance at greatness.” (AP)

In a statement at the time, the White House said: “The world should take notice — if you want to take meaningful steps towards peace and stability, then the US is willing to move rapidly to support you.”

Trump, it added, believes “there is great potential in working with Syria to stop radicalism, improve relations, and secure peace in the Middle East.”

At the time, restrictions on trade and investment in Syria, imposed under the US Caesar Act, were suspended for six months.

On Monday, that suspension was renewed for a further six months, permitting “the transfer of most basic civilian use US-origin goods, as well as software and technology, to or within Syria.”

Syria had sought the complete removal of restrictions rather than a further suspension. It is clear the US remains prepared to wield the Caesar Act as both a carrot and a stick.

The suspension of the act, said US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in a statement, “supports Syria’s efforts to rebuild its economy, restore ties with foreign partners, and foster prosperity and peace for all its citizens.”

Trump, he added, had “made clear the US expects to see concrete actions by the Syrian government to turn the page on the past and work towards peace in the region.”

When Trump and Al-Sharaa met and shook hands in Riyadh in May, it was the first meeting between a US and Syrian leader for a quarter of a century.

Bill Clinton reaches to shake hands with former Hafez Assad in Geneva, Switzerland in 2000. (AFP)

At the time, Al-Sharaa still had a $10 million bounty on his head as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist — a decade-long designation that was only formally withdrawn on Friday last week.

Al-Sharaa was the leader of Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham, formerly the Syrian off-shoot of Al-Qaeda, which emerged as an independent group in 2016 and went on to overthrow the Assad regime. The US designation of HTS as a foreign terrorist organization was revoked in July.

Since then, the State Department has sought to persuade the other 14 members of the UN Security Council to remove restrictions on Syria’s new leadership. The result was Resolution 2799, adopted with just one abstention by China on Thursday.

After the UN vote, Trump said Al-Sharaa was “doing a very good job. It’s a tough neighborhood, and he’s a tough guy, but I got along with him very well. And a lot of progress has been made with Syria.”

Burcu Ozcelik, a senior research fellow at the London-based defense and security think tank RUSI, said the outcome of the vote will allow Syria to confront several challenges.

“The moderation trajectory of Al-Sharaa’s approach to government and his own pragmatism, if harnessed and supported by the international community, can wield economic and democratic dividends for Syria,” she told Arab News.

People stand on a balcony of the historic Hejaz train station in Damascus. (AFP/File)

“But we need to be realistic about the severity of the multisided pressures on Al-Sharaa’s rule and the herculean task of building Syria.”

A report in October by the World Bank said that nearly one third of the country’s “pre-conflict gross capital stock” was damaged, and estimated the cost of reconstruction at $216 billion — about ten times Syria’s projected gross domestic product for 2024.

But the report made clear there was an appetite for investment in the new Syria among the 189 member states of the World Bank, an international cooperative which provides low- or no-interest loans and grants to developing countries.

“The challenges ahead are immense, but the World Bank stands ready to work alongside the Syrian people and the international community to support recovery and reconstruction,” said Jean-Christophe Carret, World Bank Middle East division director, in October.

“Collective commitment, coordinated action, and a comprehensive, structured support program are critical to helping Syria on its path to recovery and long-term development.”

Funding aside, Al-Sharaa also faces internal political challenges.

“We also need to recognize that the federalism debate for the future governance of Syria is not one that is taken up seriously inside the country — it is largely an externally driven set of ideas,” said Ozcelik.

Nevertheless, “pragmatic diplomacy can be a constructive driver of change in Syria, and Monday’s meeting is a reflection of the much-needed mood of optimism that Al-Sharaa has been able to muster for the country.”

She added: “The external legitimation offered by President Trump is important, but it needs to be matched with domestic and inclusive political legitimation within Syria. This will take time but is essential for the country’s stabilization.”

Sanam Vakil, director of the Middle East and North Africa program at the London-based think tank Chatham House, told Arab News: “Al-Sharaa’s visit to the White House marks a pivotal reset in US-Syria relations.

“By welcoming him and signalling support for sanctions relief, the Trump administration is betting that engagement can yield greater regional stability than containment ever did.”

In September, Al-Sharaa made history when he became the first Syrian leader to address the UN General Assembly in six decades. (Reuters)

The move, she added, also “reflects Washington’s recognition of Syria’s strategic role, not just in counter-terrorism and regional energy routes but also as a country searching for stability and economic renewal after decades of war and external interference.”

After Monday’s White House meeting, it emerged that Syria had agreed to join the Global Coalition Against Daesh, formed in 2014, becoming the 90th country to do so and joining regional members including , the UAE, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and Jordan.

According to a US statement, Syria was “partnering with the US to eliminate ISIS (Daesh) remnants and halt foreign fighter flows.” The US, it added, “will allow Syria to resume operations at its Embassy in Washington to further counterterrorism, security, and economic coordination.”

Trump’s invitation for the new Syrian government to join the coalition “signals a new level of trust in Al-Sharaa and his administration,” Caroline Rose, director of the Crime-Conflict Nexus and Military Withdrawals portfolios at the New Lines Institute, told Arab News.

Monday’s meeting in Washington between Trump and Al-Sharaa was the culmination of months of pragmatic diplomacy by the US and its allies in the region. (AP)

“Over this last year, Washington and Damascus have coordinated closely and have exchanged intelligence regarding ISIS (Daesh) activity, facilitating tip-offs that prevented several ISIS attempted attacks.”

The US, she said, also wants to bring about “a security integration deal” between Damascus and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, which have discussed integration but have clashed with the forces of the new government on a number of occasions.

“The US seeks to use Syria’s admittance into the Global Coalition as a tool to expedite talks and pressure both sides to reach relative consensus.”