Security experts looking at Monday’s car-ramming and stabbing attack at Ohio State University will find it looks familiar: Like many terrorist tactics, it was honed by Palestinians.

We ignore Palestinian terror and condemn Israel’s robust response to it at our peril. Campaigns of violence against Israeli civilians are often copied elsewhere, from the streets of Nice, France, to the Columbus, Ohio, campus.

Recent Facebook postings of the OSU perpetrator, Abdul Razak Ali Artan, a Somali immigrant, included warnings to Americans to end the war against ISIS.

Then on Monday he rammed fellow students with his car and stabbed a few more with a knife. Eleven were injured before Artan was finally shot dead by campus Police Officer Alan Horujko, whose quick action certainly saved lives.

As it happens, ISIS recently called on its followers to kill pedestrians with cars and other vehicles. According to several reports, ISIS was inspired by the July 14 attack in Nice, where a semitrailer-driving Islamist rammed celebrants of France’s Bastille Day, killing 84.

And late last week ISIS posted to the Web video clips with instructions on the proper use of knives and other sharp objects to maximize harming infidels’ bodies. Another Palestinian calling card.

Welcome to Israel, the terror lab where the latest innovations are tried, practiced and (sometimes) perfected before being exported. According to the Israeli Foreign Ministry, since the height of the “car and knife intifada” in September 2015, Palestinians committed 167 stabbings, 116 shootings, 48 vehicular attacks and one vehicle bombing, killing 42 people and injuring 602.

Yet, despite the frequency of attacks in the early days last year, and although a new form of terrorism was born, assaults at the heart of Israel’s cities rarely made it to speeches of world leaders tallying global terrorist incidents.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas cleverly dubbed the killing spree a “popular resistance.” So is it terrorism? It should be obvious that the answer is yes.

It wasn’t. “Israeli Soldiers Shoot, Kill a Knife-Wielding Palestinian” was a common headline in response. (Let’s hope no one treats Horujko’s heroic killing of Artan with the kind of suspicion and accusations directed at Israeli soldiers with similar reactions.)

Look, you don’t need to be a rah-rah pro-Israel fanatic or critic of recent trends in the Islamic world to denounce the act of running down civilians with a car or stabbing passersby to death. Beyond the moral element, there’s the practical: Recognizing terrorism as such enables you to look for ways to combat and prevent it.

The Israelis found some. Since the height of the car-and-knife intifada (which started after Abbas made spurious claims about Israel’s alleged violations of Muslim worshipers’ rights at the Temple Mount, Islam’s third holiest site), violence has significantly abated, along with the number of casualties. How?

“Lone-wolf terrorists belong to a virtual pack,” quips Peter Lerner, Israel Defense Forces spokesman. To address their threat, he says, “the IDF have mapped out locations prone to this kind of attack, we have reinforced troops on the ground and are active in gathering information and hate speech on social media that could be inspiring to like-minded terrorists.”

Hopefully, unlike the soaring speeches and media accounts that largely treat Israeli victims as if they’re a case apart from a larger, global terror phenomenon, anti-terror professionals in America and Europe will find time to coordinate with the Israelis, and learn from their regrettable but priceless experience.

It wouldn’t be the first time. Plane hijacking, bus bombing, attacks on Olympians — name your terrorist tool, it likely was first tried against Israelis.

And, true to form, the next innovation is here. Last week, due to hot temperatures and dry air, Israel experienced fast-spreading brush fires that burned over 2,750 acres of forest, hundreds of homes and caused tens of thousands of evacuations. Soon after the brush fires started, terrorists began setting additional fires, creating a perfect new terror tool.

Can ISIS be far behind, urging followers to use arson to punish American infidels? And can officials in, say, California, afford not to study the way Israelis will handle the budding “fire intifada”?