Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israeli Arab nabbed for allegedly planning bombings

Mahmoud Hussein Muhammad Bushkar, 37, researched how to make bombs, purchased equipment, conducted tests and tried to recruit accomplices, according to Israeli security forces.

Israel Police
A police car in Jerusalem on June 8, 2020. Photo by Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90.

A resident of the Israeli Arab village of Kabul in the Western Galilee has been arrested on suspicion of planning large-scale terrorist attacks, the Israel Police revealed on Thursday.

Mahmoud Hussein Muhammad Bushkar, 37, was detained during a raid by the Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet), the Central Unit of the Israel Police and the Border Police’s undercover unit, the agencies stated.

According to the statement, the suspect researched how to build bombs and bought equipment and materials with which he conducted tests, including for the production of TATP high explosives and a pipe bomb. A firearm and ammunition were also discovered during the arrest raid.

Bushkar had also planned to prepare explosive belts for the purpose of carrying out suicide bombings, it added.

He allegedly tried to recruit two more people to assist him in carrying out the attacks, but without success.

Israel’s security forces said Bushkar was inspired by the Hamas-initiated 2021 Gaza war, as well as the Palestinian terrorist group’s Oct. 7, 2023, cross-border massacre.

An indictment was expected to be filed against him in an Israeli court on Thursday, the security forces’ statement concluded.

Since the start of the war 15 months ago, there has been a growing radicalization among segments of the Jewish state’s Arab population.

A poll conducted in December 2023 by the Israel Democracy Institute’s Center for Democratic Values and Institutions found that one-third of Arabs disagree with the statement that the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre “does not reflect Arab society, the Palestinian people and the Islamic nation.”

See more from JNS Staff
“Jusoor News” emerges as post-war “bête noire” for Islamic terror group still running half of Gaza.
The director of issues management told JNS that students found to have violated the law or university policy during a protest on campus will be held accountable.
The lower house in Bern followed the example of upper one last year, and rejected a motion by a large majority.
“In 2025, the P.A. provided $156 million in ‘Pay-for-Slay.’ This is distorted!” the FM stated.
One rocket was intercepted, the other fell in open territory. No injuries were reported.
“The critical demilitarization talks with Hamas are continuing,” said the former British PM.