Despite public outcry and call for military retaliation against Jordan, Israel's prime minister
Moshe Sharett called for restraint and diplomatic measures, as less than six months before the events,
Unit 101 had attacked the village of
Qibya as part of Israel's retaliation policy, which resulted in the
deaths of 69 people and worldwide condemnation. "In Israel, there was a hue and cry for retaliation against Jordan. But Sharett favoured restraint, which helped to repair Israel's image in the West, opposed a reprisal while the memory of
Qibya was still fresh. Uncertainty about the perpetrators identity facilitated restraint." Nevertheless, Israel did retaliate militarily. The Israeli cabinet authorized a "limited" response to the massacre as well as the murder of a guard moshav
Ksalon. On 28 March 1954, the
Israel Defense Forces conducted a raid codenamed Operation Lion against the village of
Nahhalin. A force of the Israeli
Paratroopers Brigade raided the village, killing four National Guardsmen, three Jordanian soldiers, the village
mukhtar, and a woman. Israel requested that the
Jordan–Israel Mixed Armistice Commission (HJK/IMAC) denounce Jordan for the crime. Jordan's representative to the HJK/IMAC pointed out the possibility of the atrocity being carried out by Israeli Bedouin, and HJK/IMAC Chairman, Commander Hutchison abstained as there was no conclusive proof, resulting in no decision. As a result, Israel left the HJK/IMAC. This theory gained credibility when, in 1956, an ID from the Ma'ale Akrabim incident was found in Gaza by Israeli troops during the
Suez Crisis. Many believe Glubb had been right and Israel wrong, and that the Ma'ale Akrabim killers had indeed come from Egyptian-controlled territory rather than Jordan. In 1968, Israeli troops of the Sayeret Shaked special forces unit killed Said Abu Bandak, who was identified as the leader of the group that had carried out the attack, in a clash with a militant cell in the Sinai. The
Israeli Foreign Ministry cited the Ma'ale Akrabim incident, among many others, as evidence that "major Arab terrorist attacks" preceded the 1967
Six-Day War, in which Israel occupied the
West Bank and
Gaza Strip, to challenge what they describe as common claims by Palestinian and Arab spokesmen "that the recent Palestinian terrorism is the result of the Israeli 'occupation'". ==References==