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National Resistance Brigades كتائب المقاومة الوطنية | |
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Also known as | Omar Al-Qasim Forces Arabic: قوات الشهيد عمر القاسم, lit. 'Forces of the Martyr Omar Al-Qasim'[1] |
Founding leader | Nayef Hawatmeh |
Leaders | Abu Khaled |
Foundation | 1969 |
Dates of operation | 1969–present |
Country | Palestine |
Allegiance | Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine |
Motives | Establishing an independent secular state on Historic Palestine, or Palestinian state with the pre-1967 borders. |
Headquarters | Gaza Strip |
Ideology | |
Status | Active |
Allies | State allies: Iran Syria Non-state allies: Al-Qassam Brigades Al-Quds Brigades Abu Ali Mustafa Brigades Hezbollah Jihad Jibril Brigades |
Opponents | Israel |
Battles and wars | War of Attrition Black September Lebanese Civil War First Intifada Second Intifada Gaza War (2008–2009) 2012 Gaza conflict 2014 Gaza war 2021 Conflict 2023 Israel–Hamas war |
The National Resistance Brigades (Arabic: كتائب المقاومة الوطنية, romanized: Katāʼib al-Muqāwamah al-Waṭanīyah), also known as Martyr Omar Al-Qassem Forces,[4] (Arabic: قوات الشهيد عمر القاسم)[5] are the military wing of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, which operates in Gaza[6] and conducts guerilla warfare.[7] Abu Khaled is one of its commanders.[8]
It was formed in 1969[9] but it was established in late September 2000.[clarification needed][10] The group was initially known as the Red Star Brigades, before being renamed the Palestinian National Resistance Battalions during the Second Intifada.[11] They remain committed to a non-intervention policy in the domestic affairs of any Arab country.[12]
In August 2001, Palestinian security forces Amin Abu Hatab, aged 26, and Hisham Abu Jamus, aged 24, carried out an attack on an Israeli army base.[13] They killed three Israeli soldiers.[14] In 2005, they reorganized before the Israeli disengagement from Gaza and took part in firing rockets and mortars against Israeli areas inside Gaza's borders.[15]
In October 2007, they signed an agreement with other Palestinian factions, including Fatah's al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades, and between 2010 and 2011 they carried out attacks with the Palestinian Islamic Jihad.[11] On 26 September they shelled Sderot with the al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades, which they said was a response to Israeli crimes against Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza.[16] They took part in the 2014 Gaza War, and their spokesman Abu Khaled reported in an interview that 25 members of the National Resistance Brigades had been killed, including media officer Youssef Al-Wasifi. He reported that 750 rockets and mortar shells had been fired by the brigades at Israeli settlements, 20 sniper operations had been carried out, and that they had killed at least 8 Israeli soldiers in video-recorded operations.[17] In May 2017 they conducted a joint exercise with the Abdel Qader al-Husseini Brigades at a military training site in the Gaza Strip to display new artillery and missile tactics.[18]
On 30 March 2018, 'Abd al-Qader Mardi and Suliman al-Hawajri, members of the National Resistance Brigades, were killed during the Great Return March but didn't participate in hostilities.[19][20][21] In 2020 they expanded their online presence and they promoted their militant activity on Telegram.[22] In May 2021 they targeted Sufa, in Israel, with rockets.[23]
In February 2023, they announced that they bombed Israeli settlements bordering the Gaza Strip in response to Israeli strikes,[24] and in April they bombed the city of Ashkelon.[citation needed]
The National Resistance Brigades participated in the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel against Israeli forces, which began the ongoing Israel-Hamas war,[25] and their troops joined the operation launched by Hamas.[26] On 7 October they claimed to have lost three fighters in combat with the Israel Defense Forces, and on 8 October they were engaged with Israeli forces in Kfar Aza, Be'eri, and Kissufim.[27]
On February 19, 2024, their spokesman Abu Khaled announced that during the attack, the National Resistance Brigades had carried out more than 400 operations, including 100 armed clashes with Israeli forces, targeting 25 vehicles, sniping 5 soldiers, firing 110 rocket salvoes, targeting 160 positions with mortars, and shooting down Israeli drones. He also stated that 37 fighters had been killed during the war, including on October 7 and from airstrikes, and others had been arrested or were missing.[28]
Since the start of the war, the National Resistance Brigades have participated in subsequent fighting against the IDF throughout the Gaza Strip, alongside Hamas' al-Qassam Brigades and other allied Palestinian factions.[29][30]
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