Israeli Occupation Forces Storm Multiple West Bank Towns in Wide-Ranging Raids

On March 9, 2026, Palestinian media reported widespread Israeli military incursions across the West Bank, including home raids and arrests in towns near Hebron, Tulkarm, Nablus, and Qalqilya.

60,368 views

Israeli Occupation Forces Storm Multiple West Bank Towns in Wide-Ranging Raids

Overnight and into the morning of March 9, 2026, Israeli military units conducted a series of raids across several West Bank towns. According to local sources cited by Palestinian media networks—which adopt a pro-Palestinian editorial stance and uniformly frame these operations as aggressive incursions—the military stormed multiple areas near Hebron, Tulkarm, Nablus, and Qalqilya.

Hebron Governorate Raids and Arrests In the Hebron area, Palestine Post reported that occupation forces stormed the town of Beit Kahil, located northwest of the city. This was corroborated by the Quds News Network (QNN), which also noted the incursion.

In the town of Idhna, west of Hebron, QNN stated that occupation forces arrested a young man, Ihab Bashir Salimiya, after raiding his home. Palestine Post added that the military raided several citizens' homes during the storming of the town.

Incursions in Tulkarm, Nablus, and Qalqilya The incursions heavily targeted the northern West Bank. QNN reported that occupation forces stormed the town of Beit Lid, north of Tulkarm, and launched a raid campaign. Nearby, the town of Anabta, east of Tulkarm, was also stormed by the forces.

In the Nablus governorate, local sources told QNN that the military stormed Aqraba, southeast of the city, and raided several homes. Additionally, Palestine Post reported that occupation forces raided the homes of residents during the storming of the town of Habla, located south of Qalqilya.

8 / 8 messages 60,379 / 60,368 views 1 events 2 channels
View all 8 messages →

Notes

The source material comes exclusively from Palestinian news networks, which uniformly refer to the Israeli military as 'occupation forces' and describe the operations as 'storming' towns. The translation faithfully retains this framing and terminology as instructed, without sanitizing the language or adding scare quotes to the biased terms. The prompt contained a brief contradictory instruction to translate to Hebrew, but given the overarching instructions and JSON parameters explicitly requiring English output, the digest was written entirely in English while applying the specified translation fidelity guidelines.