Settler violence against Palestinians in the West Bank has reached a tipping point. Recently, it has accelerated so dramatically that even senior Trump Administration officials joined widespread international calls for Prime Minister Netanyahu to take action. What these condemnations miss is that settler violence is not an aberration that Israeli officials have failed to prevent. It is a central component in a systematic campaign by far-right elements in the Israeli government to drive Palestinians out of most of the West Bank and replace them with Israeli settlers.
Organized attacks by armed settlers, which former head of Shin Bet Ronen Bar describes as “settler terrorism,” have reached truly unprecedented levels. Over 4,500 settler attacks – four per day – have been recorded since Israel’s far-right government took office in December 2022. Repeated assaults, arson and threats of further violence have entirely depopulated 59 communities in that period – displacing more than 5,500 Palestinians.
These attacks include the murder of dozens of civilians, including three US citizens killed by settlers, none of whose deaths have resulted in criminal charges. The settlers enjoy almost complete impunity from prosecution, with upwards of 96 percent of incidents never resulting in formal charges being filed.
The frequency and severity continue to escalate: Over 1,500 Palestinians were displaced in the first ten weeks of 2026 alone, and eight have been killed by settlers.
Bezalel Smotrich, the minister in charge of the West Bank, has repeatedly called for annexing the West Bank and forcibly displacing its Palestinian residents, stating plainly that “the overriding principle for applying sovereignty [to the West Bank] is maximum territory with minimum Arabs.” Smotrich, a settler who was arrested in 2005 on suspicion of planning to blow up an Israeli highway to protest Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza, has also been explicit about the far-right’s ultimate goal: “We will apply sovereignty over the West Bank, initially through actions on the ground and subsequently through legislation and formal recognition.”
Smotrich has unveiled a comprehensive plan that would annex 82 percent of the West Bank – including territory in which some 250,000-300,000 Palestinians live. He has also repeatedly called for “encouraging the emigration” of Palestinians from the West Bank, a thinly veiled euphemism for forced displacement.
The logic of the far-right government is clear. For Israel to annex this territory, Palestinians must first be removed from it. Rather than carry out mass displacement directly and absorb the international backlash, the state empowers armed settlers to do so while preserving a measure of plausible deniability. Settler terrorism is best understood as the kinetic arm of Smotrich’s annexation strategy.
The campaign to forcibly displace Palestinians operates alongside unprecedented settlement construction – over 50,000 new housing units, 98 new settlements and construction in strategic chokepoints that sever Palestinian territorial contiguity. Just last week, the cabinet approved 30 new settlements.
While Israel is required under international law to protect the people living in territory it occupies, in many cases the IDF has done the opposite. In fact, this level of violence can only be sustained with the support of the IDF and senior Israeli officials. When settlers attack Palestinian families, they often use weapons and ATVs provided by the government. The IDF soldiers stand guard as the attacks occur – instructed to protect the settlers and arrest Palestinians if they resist. In many cases, the soldiers themselves participate.
The role of the IDF increased dramatically with the massive expansion of the IDF’s regional defense battalions after October 7. They now include over 5,500 settler reservists, further blurring the distinction between the IDF and violent settlers. Many of the same extremists responsible for attacks on Palestinians were enlisted into these battalions and issued military uniforms, army weapons and government vehicles.
Members of the regional defense battalions have been widely documented carrying out attacks on Palestinian communities. Recently, an IDF soldier whose unit detained a CNN crew described their mission clearly: “We are here because this is our land. All the West Bank is ours. […] Slowly, slowly, this will be a legal settlement.”
The IDF condemned the soldier’s remarks and disciplined his entire battalion. The IDF’s Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir and Maj. Gen. Avi Bluth, head of Central Command, also recently publicly denounced settler violence. However, the IDF’s leadership has yet to act sufficiently to alter the reality on the ground, where its soldiers continue to frequently stand by to protect violent settlers – even in the same Palestinian village where the CNN incident took place.
The backbone of GOI support comes from the very institutions responsible for preventing settler violence, which are run by officials who share the settlers’ ideology:
As echoed by several former senior Israeli security officials, the far-right’s violent campaign in the West Bank carries a direct cost to Israel’s own security. The Israeli military’s inadequate presence on the Gaza border on the eve of the October 7 attacks was in part driven by the redeployment of forces to the West Bank to protect settlers. Today, settler violence and new settlements require a significant diversion of IDF resources to the West Bank at a time when the military is stretched across active engagements in Gaza, Lebanon, Syria and Iran. The IDF Chief of Staff himself recently warned the cabinet that the army is nearing its limits, telling ministers, “I’m raising ten red flags for you. At this rate, the IDF will collapse into itself.”
While President Trump has often said he is delivering regional peace in the Middle East, the Israeli far-right clearly sees his presidency as an opportunity to permanently seize Palestinian territory, even at the cost of endless conflict. Senior officials in his Administration have recently voiced their frustration at the recent escalation in violence, and their pressure has reportedly resulted in Israeli promises to create a dedicated unit in the Defense Ministry to deal with violent settlers and to sanction Israelis who build outposts in Area B. However, unless the Administration sustains this pressure until Israel’s security forces begin cracking down on violent settlers, the ultimate casualty will be not only the Palestinian communities being driven from their land, but the viability of long-term peace.