Masked Israeli settlers attack 2 Palestinian villages in the West Bank
[November 12, 2025]
By JOSEF FEDERMAN, SHLOMO MOR and MELANIE LIDMAN
JERUSALEM (AP) — Dozens of masked Israeli settlers attacked a pair of
Palestinian villages in the occupied 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 series of 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.
Earlier on Tuesday, tens of thousands of Israelis attended the funeral
of an Israeli soldier whose remains 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 for the broader public in
Israel, where Goldin became a household name.
Hamas returned his remains on Sunday as part of the U.S.-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
The U.N. 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.
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 hardline 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
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,
saying that “settler violence and the acceleration of settlement
projects are reaching new heights, threatening the stability of the West
Bank.”
Palestinians in Gaza still struggling to access food
Displaced Palestinians in central Gaza said they continue to rely
heavily on charity kitchens for their only daily meal, as soaring market
prices and the lack of income leave them struggling.
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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.
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.
The latest war began with the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel when
around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, were killed, and 251 people
were kidnapped.
Close adviser to Netanyahu resigns
Cabinet Minister Ron Dermer, one of Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu’s closest confidants, announced his resignation on
Tuesday, citing family reasons.
In a letter, Dermer said he had promised his family to serve two
years but extended his term by an additional year to deal with
Iran’s nuclear program and “to end the war in Gaza on Israel’s terms
and bring our hostages home.”
The U.S.-born Dermer is a former Israeli ambassador to Washington.
As strategic affairs minister, he served as Netanyahu’s envoy
throughout the war in dealing with the United States and ceasefire
negotiations.
Funeral for soldier whose remains were held 11 years
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.
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. On Tuesday, it
announced it had dismantled the tunnel shaft where his body was
found. The military retrieved Shaul's body in January.

Eulogies from Goldin's siblings, parents, and former fiancee at his
funeral never mentioned Netanyahu, who was prime minister when
Goldin was kidnapped and for most of the period since. They 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.
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.
___
Mor reported from Kfar Saba, Israel. Lidman reported from Tel Aviv,
Israel. Associated Press reporters Julia Frankel and Ibrahim Hazboun
in Jerusalem, and Fatma Khaled in Cairo, contributed to this report.
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