Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

US sanctions ‘militant’ Palestinian group in Judea, Samaria

Washington “condemns any and all acts of violence committed in the West Bank, whoever the perpetrators,” Foggy Bottom said.

Lions' Den
Members of the Lions’ Den groups give away sweets to people during celebrations of the birth of the Prophet Muḥammad in Nablus, September 27, 2023. Photo by Nasser Ishtayeh/Flash90.

The U.S. State Department is sanctioning the Palestinian terrorist group Lions’ Den, Foggy Bottom announced on Thursday.

The department called the group, which Washington does not designate as a foreign terrorist organization, “a militant Palestinian group centered in Nablus’s Old City in the West Bank.”

Matthew Miller, the State Department spokesman, noted that Lions’ Den claimed responsibility for “several” drive-by shootings in the area of Nablus in October 2022.

“Lions’ Den members opened fire at Israeli vehicles driving close to the nearby settlement of Elon Moreh, injuring a taxi driver and damaging vehicles,” Miller added. “In a separate attack, numerous shots were fired toward the West Bank settlement of Har Bracha.”

Miller added that Lions’ Den “fighters” hurt and killed Palestinian civilians “during clashes between Palestinian fighters and Palestinian Authority security forces in Nablus.”

“In April 2024, Palestinian media reported that Lions’ Den fighters targeted Israeli forces with small arms at an Israeli checkpoint in Nablus,” he added.

Miller did not say why Washington was sanctioning the group in June when the department cited attacks dating back to October 2022.

“The United States condemns any and all acts of violence committed in the West Bank, whoever the perpetrators, and we will use the tools at our disposal to expose and hold accountable those who threaten peace and stability there,” he said.

U.S. officials in the Biden administration typically use the term “West Bank” to refer to what the Israeli government calls Judea and Samaria—names that date back to the Bible.

Earlier in the day, the Associated Press reported that U.S. sanctions of individual Jews in Judea and Samaria amounted, to those sanctioned, to “at most, an annoyance.”

A survey conducted for the Washington Free Beacon found broad support for Israel and strong approval of U.S. President Donald Trump’s handling of the U.S.-Israel relationship, while a majority said they are less likely to vote for candidates with anti-Israel positions.
Thousands at Pamplona’s San Fermín festival held a banner tied to Basque group EHKS, prompting condemnation from Israel’s Foreign Ministry.
A years-long effort identified and digitized the names of 9,100 Jews buried in Krakow’s historic Plaszów cemetery before it was destroyed by the Nazis.
The arrests were carried out overnight in separate raids in the Judea towns of Al-Majd and Ad-Dhahiriya.
“Even the Palestinian Authority admits it,” the Israeli Foreign Ministry said.
Teams from Jerusalem and Beirut will meet in Rome to draft a full peace agreement ready for implementation once the Iranian terror proxy is no longer a factor.