A mosque in a village outside the West Bank city of Ramallah was defaced and set on fire early Thursday, the third day of extremist Jewish violence that has prompted widespread condemnation and new law enforcement steps by the Israeli government.

The attack came after the Israeli Army moved in overnight to remove two structures at an unauthorized settler outpost of six families near Nablus.

Inside the third floor of the mosque, where carpets and chairs were burned, Hebrew graffiti said “war” and “price tag,” the name given to a campaign by radical settlers angered by Israeli government policy. Other graffiti referred to the settler outpost, saying, “Regards from Mitzpe Yitzhar.”

On Tuesday, rumors that illegal outposts were to be removed prompted dozens of settlers to attack an Israeli Army base, a move that hardened the resolve of Israeli leaders to contain right-wing militants.