| The intifada, the uprising of the Palestinian Arabs,
was triggered, though not caused, by a car crash in which four Palestinians
were killed by an Israeli vehicle on December 8, 1987. Hundreds
of Palestinians turned on Israeli troops stationed in the Gaza Strip’s
largest refugee camp of Jabalya, and demonstrations and riots spread
like wildfire to other refugee camps throughout the Gaza Strip and
the more affluent and secular West Bank. In December, the riots
spread to Jerusalem, where scenes previosly seen on the streets
of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, of barricades, burning tires,
Palestinian flags and stone throwing, were repeated. While the intifada
was low-tech, dozens of Palestinian teenagers ambushed small patrols
of Israeli soldiers, showering them with large rocks, attempting
to kill with brute force. This tactic soon gave way to using thousands
of Molotov bottles, over 100 hand grenade attacks and more than
500 attacks with guns or explosives. Moreover, the Palestinians
encouraged young children to participate in the demonstrations and
attacks, practically turning them into human shields against Israeli
soldiers trying to restore order. The IDF – trained to fight
against regular armies – had no ready-made answer to civil
resistance in which its tanks and warplanes lost all significance
against stones thrown by civilian rebels. Two years of intifada
brought the Palestinian problem to the forefront of international
attention and heightened the debate within the Israeli society as
to a future settlement with the Palestinians. The army leadership
found itself under attack from boths sides of the political spectrum,
accused of too much laxity by some and of brutality by others.
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