Israeli government reaction The attack was widely condemned by top Israeli government officials. Israeli President
Chaim Herzog warned that settler vigilantism was a "dangerous phenomenon." Israeli Minister of Foreign Affairs
Shimon Peres described it as "irresponsible and unacceptable."
Israeli press reaction According to Joel Greenberg of
The Jerusalem Post, the attack "stirred much internal debate in the settler community, which this week appeared torn between those seeking to project a moderate image, or who genuinely disapproved of the act, and those who opposed any criticism of the rampage, which they saw as understandable, if not justified." According to Yehuda Litani of
The Jerusalem Post, "settlers hold that the Israeli Army does not provide them with adequate security." A group of settlers formed a committee to campaign in support of the arrest thirteen settlers. The committee members included
Gush Emunim figure
Moshe Levinger, lawyer
Elyakim Haetzni, and writer
Naomi Frankel. Israeli ultranationalist
Meir Kahane called for Israelis to "plant bombs at Dheisheh" and become heroes. Writer
Chaim Bermant also described the attack as a "pogrom," further arguing that "
Likud, which was thought of, not so long ago, as the last word in right-wing extremism, and even as neo-fascist, has now become a middle-of-the-road party, not because it has changed its attitudes, but because many electors have changed theirs." According to Yehuda Litani of
The Jerusalem Post, "the Israel-Arab conflict rapidly is becoming internal, rather than an external," saying that the Israeli military's role "now revolves largely around safeguarding main roads, protecting Israeli buses and preventing demonstrations, rather than securing the borders and training the army for the next war." Litani further predicted that "the internal struggle is just beginning. So far, it has been confined to camps in the West Bank, but tomorrow it may spill over into Nablus, Gaza and Ramallah. And who knows where it will go from there?" == See also ==