West Bank

region, Palestine
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Also known as: Al-Ḍaffah al-Gharbīyah, Judaea and Samaria, ha-Gadah ha-Maʾaravit

West Bank, area of the former British-mandated (1920–47) territory of Palestine west of the Jordan River, claimed from 1949 to 1988 as part of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan but occupied from 1967 by Israel. The territory, excluding East Jerusalem, is also known within Israel by its biblical names, Judaea and Samaria.

Within its present boundaries, the West Bank represents the portion of the former mandate retained in 1948 by the Arab forces that entered Palestine after the departure of the British. The borders and status of the area were established by the Jordanian-Israeli armistice of April 3, 1949. In the decades that followed the armistice, Jordan, Israel, and the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) each laid claim to the approximately 2,185-square-mile (5,660-square-km) area. Population (2024 est.) 4,026,000; population excluding Israeli settlements, 3,325,905. Population density (2024) 1,842.6 people per square mile; (2024) 711.3 people per square km.

Quick Facts
Also Known As:
Al-Ḍaffah al-Gharbīyah
ha-Gadah ha-Maʾaravit
Judaea and Samaria
Population:
(2024 est.) 4,026,0001
Official Name(S):
West Bank; Al-Ḍaffah al-Gharbiyyah (Arabic); Ha-gadah Ha-maʾaravit (Hebrew)
Total Area (Sq Km):
5,660
Total Area (Sq Mi):
2,185
Arabic:
Al-Ḍaffah al-Gharbiyyah
Hebrew:
Ha-Gadah Ha-Maʿaravit
  1. Includes 700,000 Israeli Jews in the West Bank.

Geography

Geographically, the West Bank is mostly composed of north-south–oriented limestone hills (conventionally called the Samarian Hills north of Jerusalem and the Judaean Hills south of Jerusalem) having an average height of 2,300 to 3,000 feet (700 to 900 meters). The hills descend eastwardly to the low-lying Great Rift Valley of the Jordan River and the Dead Sea. The West Bank does not lie entirely within the drainage system of the Jordan River, as elevated areas in the west give rise to the headwaters of streams flowing westward to the Mediterranean Sea.

Tomb of Mohammed Bin Ali, Salalah, Oman.
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Annual rainfall of more than 27 inches (685 mm) occurs in the most highly elevated areas in the northwest and declines in the southwest and southeast, along the Dead Sea, to less than 4 inches (100 mm). Widely variable land-use patterns are dictated by the availability of water. Relatively well-watered nonirrigated terrain in the hills (especially those of Samaria) is used for the grazing of sheep and the cultivation of cereals, olives, and fruits such as melons. Irrigated land in the hills and the Jordan River valley is intensively cultivated for assorted fruits and vegetables.

The industrial development of the West Bank was never strong during the Jordanian period, and by the mid-1960s there were less than a dozen industrial establishments with more than 30 employees in the area. Israeli occupation resulted in constraints on West Bank industrial development; investment capital remained scarce both in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, and only the transportation infrastructure saw much improvement after 1967. This improvement occurred mostly for military reasons, although it also benefited agriculture by facilitating the supply and servicing of markets. Although human capital is abundant among the highly educated population, foreign direct investment remains scarce because of the economic uncertainty related to the occupation as well as Israeli restrictions on access between the West Bank and external markets.

The principal Palestinian municipalities of the West Bank are Jenin, Nablus, and Ramallah north of Jerusalem and Bethlehem and Hebron (Al-Khalīl) south of Jerusalem. Jericho (Arīḥā) is the chief municipality of the Jordan River valley. Tulkarm, which straddles the armistice border, serves as a hub—albeit a restricted one—between the northern municipalities of the West Bank and the Tel Aviv metropolitan area in Israel. Several small universities in the West Bank (founded or attaining university status in the 1970s) enroll mostly Palestinian students.

Many Palestinians were displaced after the 1948 and 1967 wars. About 300,000 Palestinians (most of whom were originally from territory captured by Israel in 1948) left the impoverished West Bank for Transjordan (later Jordan) during the year after the 1948 war; and about 380,000 Palestinians fled the West Bank after it was captured by the Israelis in 1967. Between 1967 and 1977 an estimated 6,300 Palestinians were evicted from East Jerusalem and replaced by Jewish immigrants, and more than 10,000 others lost their residency rights between 1995 and 2010.

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History

Jordanian annexation

Upon the departure of the British occupying forces in May 1948 and the proclamation of the State of Israel, the armies of five Arab countries entered Palestine. In the ensuing conflict—the first of the Arab-Israeli wars—Israel expanded beyond the territory contemplated by the partition plan. The West Bank, as demarcated by the Jordanian-Israeli armistice of 1949, was broadly similar to (but smaller than) one of the zones designated as an Arab state by the United Nations (UN) partition plan for Palestine in 1947 (see United Nations Resolution 181). According to that plan, Jerusalem was to have been an international zone. However, the city was instead divided into Israeli (west) and Jordanian (east) sectors. The Arab state whose creation was envisioned by the 1947 UN partition plan never came into being, and the West Bank was formally annexed by Jordan on April 24, 1950, although this annexation was recognized only by Great Britain and Pakistan.

From 1950 until it was occupied by Israel in the Six-Day War of 1967, the West Bank was governed as part of Jordan, though it was divided from the Jordanian population of the East Bank by the Jordan River. The relationship between the East and West banks was uneasy, both because of Palestinian suspicions of the Hashemite dynasty and because of the aspirations of Palestinians in the West Bank for a separate state. The web of relationships connecting the two halves of Jordan grew during this period, however, and by 1967 the West Bank represented about 47 percent of Jordan’s population and about 30 percent of its gross domestic product.

Israeli occupation

During the 1967 war Israel occupied the West Bank and established a military administration throughout the area, except in East Jerusalem, which Israel incorporated into itself, extending Israeli citizenship, law, and civil administration to the area. In the remaining areas of the West Bank, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) issued a military order that prohibited the display of political symbols and the distribution of political publications and restricted public gatherings, preventing civil resistance to Israeli authorities for much of the first decade of Israeli occupation.

This period of relative calm began to wane during the late 1970s and early ’80s as Israel began a more aggressive course of establishing settlements. By the early ’80s the settlements numbered in the scores. Land, businesses, and buildings were expropriated from the Palestinian inhabitants, many of whom were long displaced, having fled the wars of 1948 and 1967. During the administration of Prime Minister Menachem Begin (1977–83), the number of Israeli settlements more than tripled, and the number of Israeli settlers increased more than fivefold. Israeli claims of a right to administer land in the West Bank not cultivated or privately owned (a category that might amount to between 30 and 70 percent of the West Bank, depending on the definitions adopted) gave rise to suspicions that Israel intended ultimately to annex the area piecemeal.

Throughout the 1970s and ’80s the issue of Israeli rule over the West Bank Palestinians remained unresolved. Israel regarded possession of the West Bank as vital to its security, and the growing number of Israeli settlements further stiffened Israeli unwillingness to relinquish control of the area. At the same time, the chief political representative of the West Bank Palestinians, the PLO, refused to negotiate with Israel and, until 1988, was unwilling to recognize Israel’s right to exist; Israel refused to negotiate with or recognize the PLO for years after that date.

Creation of the Palestinian Authority

In 1988 Jordan’s King Hussein renounced all administrative responsibility for the West Bank, thereby severing his country’s remaining connections with the area. Meanwhile, a popular uprising broke out among the Palestinians of the West Bank in December 1987, and the first intifada became virtually a permanent feature of West Bank life for the next few years, despite the Israeli army’s continued attempts to suppress the disorders.

As a result of secret negotiations begun in January 1993, Israel and the PLO in September reached agreement on a plan to gradually extend self-government to the Palestinians of the West Bank (and Gaza Strip) over a five-year period prior to a final settlement of the issue of Palestinian statehood (see Oslo Accords). Under the plan, Israel’s civilian and military administration would be dissolved and the Israeli army withdrawn from populous Palestinian areas. In the West Bank the plan’s actual implementation began in May 1994 with the Israelis’ withdrawal from the town of Jericho and its environs and the creation of the Palestinian Authority (PA) led by PLO chair Yasser Arafat. The following year the West Bank was divided into three zones of administration and security during the interim period:

  • Area A: areas under Palestinian administration and security
  • Area B: areas under Palestinian administration but joint Israeli-Palestinian security
  • Area C: areas under Israeli administration and security

But the peace process began to fall apart after the assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in 1995 and the subsequent election of Benjamin Netanyahu, an outspoken critic of the Oslo Accords. In 2000, despite expectations of autonomy by the end of the previous decade, the PA controlled less than one-fifth of the West Bank, while Israeli occupation (in some areas, combined with PA local administration) continued in the remainder. With Jerusalem’s status proving to be the most contentious of the outstanding matters, Israeli opposition leader Ariel Sharon made a provocative visit to the Temple Mount (where Al-Aqsa Mosque, one of Islam’s holiest sites, stands). Frustration boiled over, and a new uprising (often dubbed the “Al-Aqsa intifada”) began, lasting nearly half a decade.

Rule of Mahmoud Abbas under continued occupation

In 2006 parliamentary elections Fatah—the leading constituent faction within the PLO—suffered a decisive loss to Hamas, reflecting years of dissatisfaction with Fatah’s governance, which was criticized as corrupt and inefficient. The victory of Hamas, a group that was regarded by many as a terrorist organization, resulted in sanctions and boycotts from Israel, the United States, and the European Union. In 2007, with violence escalating in the Gaza Strip and the failure of a coalition government, PA president Mahmoud Abbas dissolved the Hamas-led government and established in its place an emergency cabinet favoring Fatah. The increasingly violent power struggle between Hamas and Fatah resulted in a split between the West Bank, run by Fatah through the emergency PA government, and the Gaza Strip, controlled by Hamas. Israel and other members of the international community moved to aid the West Bank, offering shows of economic and diplomatic support for Abbas and Fatah while blockading the Gaza Strip.

Abbas appointed Salam Fayyad prime minister of the emergency cabinet. During his tenure the PA pursued a neoliberal state-building agenda in the West Bank to prepare it for eventual statehood. In 2011, after years of stalled peace talks, the PA began lobbying for international recognition of statehood and started gaining partial recognition in 2012. Fayyad, however, failed to garner a wide base of support among Palestinians and resigned in 2013 as the PA was facing a financial crisis.

The 2010s were marked by continued unilateralism in the West Bank. The Fatah-dominated PA continued to work toward establishing itself as an independent government in the urban Palestinian areas of the West Bank while Israel expanded its settlement activity in the territory. By the close of the decade, many in Israel were calling for the annexation of parts of the West Bank.

Israeli raids and the Israel-Hamas War

A wave of attacks on Israelis in early 2022 led the IDF to conduct frequent raids in the West Bank, especially in the northern West Bank cities of Jenin, Nablus, and Tulkarm, in an effort to root out militants. The confrontations between Palestinians and the IDF led to the deadliest year in the territory in nearly two decades.

On October 7, 2023, Hamas conducted a surprise land, sea, and air assault on Israel from the Gaza Strip, leading to the deadliest day in Israel since its independence in 1948. The following day the IDF began restricting movement in the West Bank, blocking the entrance to many cities and villages altogether as it stepped up raids, which took place almost daily around refugee camps in the northern part of the territory during the Israel-Hamas War. Attacks on West Bank Palestinians by vigilante Israeli settlers increased as the number of gun permits and weaponry in the settlements proliferated, especially at the initiative of Israel’s far-right national security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir. In some cases settlers violently seized land and created new outposts, prompting U.S. sanctions against a small number of individuals and organizations related to the settlement movement.

In August 2024, days after militant groups claimed responsibility for an attempted suicide bombing in Tel Aviv, Israel announced a large-scale offensive in the West Bank that it said would prevent further terrorist attacks that might originate from the territory. The IDF blockaded roads around Jenin, Tulkarm, and Al-Faraa refugee camp as ground forces and aerial vehicles entered them, destroying roads that Israeli forces said they suspected might contain explosive devices and controlling access to hospitals where they said militants might hide.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Adam Zeidan.