A car-ramming targeting Israeli troops in Jerusalem wounded 14 people Thursday while two Palestinians were shot dead in clashes in the occupied West Bank, as violence spiked a week after Washington's controversial Middle East peace plan. A third person was killed by Israeli officers inside the Old City in east Jerusalem after firing on police, Israeli officials said.
The alleged perpetrator of the car ramming was arrested Thursday evening after a day-long manhunt. The suspect was not immediately identified. The army said it was deploying additional troops across the West Bank ahead of Friday prayers, often a gathering point for Palestinian demonstrations.
The ramming occurred in central Jerusalem shortly before 2:00 am (0000 GMT) where the soldiers had been marching, the army said, adding that one of them was "severely injured". Public radio said they were new recruits on their way to an induction ceremony at Jerusalem's Western Wall, the holiest site where Jews can pray. The attacker fled to the occupied West Bank but was arrested near the Gush Etzion settlement, Israeli police said.
Prior to the arrest, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made a visit to near the settlement and pledged a firm response. "Terrorism will not defeat us; we will win!," he said. It was the most serious escalation in violence since US President Donald Trump revealed his peace plan on January 28.
A spokesman for Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas blamed Trump's peace proposal for the unrest. "It was the deal of the century that created this atmosphere of escalation and tension," Nabil Abu Rudeinah said. Netanyahu hit back, directly addressing Abbas and accusing him of stoking violence.
"This will bring you nothing - neither the stabbings, car rammings... or incitement to violence. We will do whatever it takes to keep us safe." The Islamist Hamas movement, which controls the Gaza Strip and has fought three wars with Israel, hailed the car-ramming as a "practical response" to Trump's plan, but stopped short of claiming responsibility.
Trump's plan unilaterally gives Israel most of what it has sought in previous negotiations including an "undivided capital" in Jerusalem. The plan angered Palestinians, whose leaders called for street protests over what they saw as its pro-Israel bias.
Trump's adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner was scheduled to meet UN Security Council members on Thursday to present the plan, which he drew up. Abbas is due at the UN next week to express opposition to the US initiative.
While the initial Palestinian response to the plan saw little violence, tensions have soared in recent days. In the northern West Bank town of Jenin on Thursday, Israeli forces shot dead two people - 19-year-old Yazan Abu Tabikh and Palestinian policeman Tareq Badwan.
The Israeli army said it had gone to the area to demolish the home of a Palestinian involved in the killing of a Jewish settler in 2018. Troops then shot at Palestinians who had "hurled explosive devices and fired towards them", the army said.