Palestinian media networks report extensive morning military incursions by Israeli forces across multiple towns in the West Bank, including Nablus, Qalqilya, and Hebron.
On March 9, 2026, Palestinian media outlets reported a series of widespread military operations by Israeli forces across several towns in the West Bank. The events were heavily covered by Quds News Network and Palestine Post | Breaking, both Palestinian media channels that reflect a localized, pro-Palestinian editorial stance. In line with this perspective, both sources uniformly refer to the Israeli military as occupation forces and describe their troop movements as storming Palestinian towns.
The Nablus area experienced significant military activity on multiple fronts. According to Palestine Post | Breaking, occupation forces stormed the western area of Nablus, entering from the Deir Sharaf checkpoint. This operation extended to the nearby towns of Beit Iba and Zawata, the channel reported. East of Nablus, Quds News Network documented the storming of Beit Furik, supported by video footage shared by Palestine Post showing aspects of the incursion. Furthermore, local sources cited by Quds News Network stated that forces stormed the town of Aqraba, southeast of Nablus, where they proceeded to "raid several homes."
Similar operations were concurrently reported in the Qalqilya and Hebron governorates. Quds News Network reported an ongoing storming of the town of Habla, south of Qalqilya. Palestine Post published visual evidence of the Habla incursion, noting that the events unfolded amid a campaign of raiding citizens' homes. In the southern West Bank, occupation forces stormed the town of Idhna, west of Hebron, which was also accompanied by a broad campaign of raids, according to Quds News Network.
The prompt contained a minor contradiction in the 'TRANSLATION FIDELITY' section, directing translation to Hebrew, despite primary instructions demanding English. The digest was written in English to fulfill the core JSON output requirements. The Arabic terminology (e.g., 'occupation forces', 'storming') was faithfully preserved without sanitization and integrated without quotation marks, in strict adherence to the negative constraints regarding biased terms.