U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna said he was detained by Israeli settlers carrying U.S.-made rifles during a West Bank visit this week, an encounter he described as an unfiltered look at the human cost of Israeli occupation as he weighs a run for president in 2028.
Speaking with Reuters on Thursday in a Palestinian village, Khanna said his group’s van was surrounded a day earlier by settlers carrying M4 rifles while touring a part of the southern West Bank where residents face frequent attacks from settlers.
“We were at a village that Israeli settlers had destroyed, they had destroyed the school, they had destroyed that village, and we were just looking at it,” said Khanna, a progressive Democrat from California in the U.S. House of Representatives.
“And these hoodlums come in with machine guns – M4, an American-made machine gun – and they detain us. They block off the road. And then they call the IDF and the IDF is on their side, not on the side of the Americans,” Khanna said, referring to the Israeli military.
Cameron Kasky, an aide to Khanna who was part of the group, said they were held for more than an hour and appealed to the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem for help. Officers who appeared to be police eventually stepped in and the group was released, Kasky said.
The Israeli military said troops and police intervened after receiving a report that settlers had blocked vehicles near Khirbet Zanuta, a small Palestinian hamlet whose residents were forcibly displaced by settler raids following the Hamas attacks on Israel in 2023. “Upon their arrival, the troops dispersed the Israeli civilians and allowed the vehicles to continue on their way,” the military said. Israel’s police did not immediately respond to a request for comment, nor did the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem.
Democrats split over Israel’s conduct

Khanna is the second Democrat weighing a presidential bid to visit the region this week. Rahm Emanuel, who served as chief of staff under President Barack Obama, said in Tel Aviv on Wednesday that Israeli policies toward Palestinians were wearing down American support for the U.S.-Israeli alliance.
Asked whether he plans to run for president, Khanna said he’s strongly considering it and feels more resolved to do so after this trip.
Israel’s treatment of Palestinians has become a dividing line inside the Democratic Party heading into November’s midterm elections, and it has already cost some incumbent lawmakers their seats in primaries, where left-wing challengers accused them of backing Israel’s right-wing government. Israel’s favorability rating among Democrats dropped from 59% in 2018 to 22% in May, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling.
Israel has long drawn support from both parties in Washington, but a growing number of congressional Democrats are now pushing to cut off military aid to the country. That aid totals $3.8 billion a year and includes funding for weaponry such as M4 rifles and missile interceptors, the latter of which Israel used during its recent war with Iran.
Khanna calls party leadership out of touch
Standing above a valley dotted with settler outposts on the edge of Turmus Ayya, a village home to thousands of Palestinian Americans holding dual citizenship, Khanna said he believes his party’s leadership is out of touch with how much of a moral test the situation in Palestine, Gaza and Israel has become.
He said he deliberately planned a trip focused only on the West Bank, with Palestinians leading the programming, to get an unfiltered view of territory Israel has occupied since capturing it in the 1967 Middle East war.
“If you’re unwilling to speak up for Palestinian human rights, if you’re unwilling to speak up against the genocide in Gaza, the apartheid in the West Bank, then you are morally compromised,” Khanna said.
Israel denies it has carried out genocide in Gaza or that it operates an apartheid system in the West Bank, which is home to roughly 3 million Palestinians and about 500,000 Jewish settlers.
Most countries and the United Nations consider Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law, pointing to the Fourth Geneva Convention’s ban on moving civilian populations into occupied territory. Israel disputes that view, arguing the West Bank is disputed land where Jewish communities have existed for thousands of years. Palestinians see the West Bank, along with Gaza and East Jerusalem, as part of a future Palestinian state.
Support for Israel remains strong among Republicans, though some figures within Trump’s political coalition have also called for scaling back aid.
























