West Bank – Israel’s Settlement Drive Is Becoming Irreversible, Diplomats Fear

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    Houses are seen in the West Bank Jewish settlement of Maale Adumim May 24, 2016. REUTERS/Baz RatnerWest Bank – In the hills east of Jerusalem, overlooking the Palestinian city of Jericho and the Jordan Valley, stands a religious Jewish settlement whose red-tile roofs, neat gardens and brightly colored playgrounds give the sense of permanence.

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    Mitzpe Yericho has stood on this escarpment, close to the Dead Sea – the lowest point on earth – since 1978, one of more than 230 settlements Israelis have built on occupied land in the West Bank and East Jerusalem over the past half-century.

    Diplomats and international monitors are increasingly concerned that the drive, which has seen Israel settle more than half a million of its people at a cost of tens of billions of dollars, may be reaching the point of irreversibility.

    The ongoing expansion further diminishes the prospect of any significant progress being made when foreign ministers from 20 countries meet in Paris this week to discuss how to revive Middle East peace efforts, given the settlements have been a central obstacle for at least two decades.

    If a peace deal were magically struck tomorrow, the Palestinians would expect the Israelis living in Mitzpe Yericho to leave. But its 3,000 residents, nearly all whom are religious nationalists, have no such intention. To them, the settlement enterprise is God-given and irreversible.

    “If there’s peace with the Palestinians we’re staying and if there’s no peace we’re staying,” said Yoel Mishael, 65, who has lived in Mitzpe Yericho since its founding. “It’s part of Israel, according to the Bible. It’s something from God.”

    The foreign ministers will meet on Friday with the aim of paving the way for a summit later in the year that they hope the Israeli and Palestinian leaders will attend.

    On Monday, in a sign that he is aware of the growing international pressure, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was in favor of parts of the Arab peace initiative, a proposal put forward by Saudi Arabia in 2002 that would grant Israel recognition in exchange for withdrawing from the West Bank and East Jerusalem, among other steps.

    Yet while some momentum may be building, there is scant indication the settlement enterprise can be halted, let alone reversed, leaving a fundamental barrier in the path to peace.

    A VAST INVESTMENT

    The settlement project began after Israel captured the West Bank and East Jerusalem in the 1967 war. In the 1970s, with the government’s encouragement, large number of Jews began moving onto the occupied land. There are now 550,000 of them.

    Many live in large blocs near Jerusalem or the ‘green line’ that separates Israel from the Palestinian territories, while others live deep inside the West Bank, in highly protected enclaves or pre-fabricated ‘outposts’ perched on hill tops. All the constructions are considered illegal under international law. Israel disputes this, and plays down the term occupation.

    Calculating the financial cost of settlements to Israel is difficult; as well as the capital required to build there are defense and infrastructure costs and the price of tax breaks for residents who move there. But the Macro Center for Political Economics, an Israeli think-tank, estimates building alone has cost around $30 billion over the past 40 years.

    Barely a month goes by without a fresh announcement from the government or one of its ministries about West Bank territory being declared “state land”, a precursor to settlement building, or a decision to allow new construction to proceed.

    At the same time, Palestinians living in a part of the West Bank known as Area C, which accounts for 60 percent of the total and is where most settlements are located, are being uprooted from the land in increasing numbers.
    Labourers work on the construction of a building in the West Bank Jewish settlement of Maale Adumim May 24, 2016. REUTERS/Baz Ratner
    During a visit to a sensitive part of the West Bank near the Palestinian city of Nablus, where settlements occupy almost every hilltop and are steadily expanding their footprint, U.N. diplomats studied maps and pointed out how the Israeli enclaves were spreading east toward the Jordan Valley.

    “It starts to look irreversible,” said one official, a view separately supported by half a dozen foreign diplomats.

    Under the Oslo accords of the mid-1990s, Israel retains full control over Area C, where large tracts have been declared closed military areas. As a result, Israeli courts tend to approve the removal of Palestinians from the area and the demolition of their homes, even though the accords did not change the illegal status of settlements there.

    “Settlements are the vehicle for taking control of the land,” said Catherine Cook, an official with the U.N. office for the coordination of humanitarian assistance and an authority on settlements, speaking last month.

    Asked whether she believed the settlement enterprise was irreversible, she replied: “Some of it has to be reversible.”

    PRESSURE FROM WITHIN

    If a peace deal were struck, many settlements would undoubtedly remain. While not openly acknowledged, Palestinian negotiators accept that land swaps, in which the Israelis would keep major settlement blocs along the green line and near Jerusalem, and the Palestinians would receive equivalent amounts of land from Israel in return, would be part of the deal.

    But that would still leave vast areas of the West Bank, where 2.8 million Palestinians live in major cities such as Hebron, Nablus and Ramallah, dotted with more than a hundred settlements, many large and protected by the military.

    Within Israel’s right-wing government, there is little appetite to cede any ground to the Palestinians. Netanyahu says their failure to recognize Israel as a Jewish state is the biggest obstacle to peace, not the settlements.

    Education Minister Naftali Bennett is an ardent supporter settlements and wants Israel to annex all of Area C rather than allowing a Palestinian state to emerge. Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman lives in a settlement and is similarly wary of Palestinian statehood, even if like Netanyahu he has welcomed elements of the Arab peace initiative.

    Hagit Ofran, a senior official at Peace Now, an Israeli NGO opposed to settlements, believes lines could be drawn that would allow a Palestinian state to emerge even if Israel kept many of its enclaves. But even then she estimates that as many as 150,000 settlers may have to be uprooted.

    While some might leave willingly if offered the right compensation, many others would not. The removal of just 8,500 settlers from Gaza in 2005 caused violence and outrage.

    Many of the settlers in the heartland of the West Bank are religious nationalists who believe all the land, which they call Judea and Samaria, was gifted to Israel in the Bible. They are not interested in financial incentives to leave.

    On the northern edge of Mitzpe Yericho, a lookout point provides sweeping views of Jericho and the Jordan Valley. An audio recording gives visitors a selective history of the region, with an English narration explaining how in the Bible God spoke to Joshua after the death of Moses, saying:

    “Prepare to cross the River Jordan together with all these people into the land which I am giving the Israelites. Every spot on which your foot treads, I will give to you.”

    At the end of the account, the narrator adds: “Today, more than 3,000 years later, Israeli settlements have once again renewed this Biblical landscape … We wish you a pleasant visit.”


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    11 Comments
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    AdamReich
    AdamReich
    7 years ago

    But we have Someone good to trust in BH!

    Logical_Abe
    Logical_Abe
    7 years ago

    Please tell those “Diplomats and international monitors” that the ENTIRE Yehuda & Shomron, aka The West Bank, is as Jewish as Jerusalem and Tel Aviv and part of the Jewish State of Israel. Palestinians, a new breed, have no right taking Jewish land away from Jews and should go back to their hometown in Jordan. If they don’t like it in Jordan they have 21 more Arab countries to go to.

    thetruthis
    thetruthis
    7 years ago

    If you want a basic read to understand why this whole zionist enterprise is a disaster for Judiasm and klal Yisroel please check out “The Threat From Within” by Yakov Rabkin. He is a professor of History at Montreal University and is far from being Satmar or NK and is not writing a book defending the Satmar shittah so you can get a basic non-biased overview.

    savtat
    savtat
    7 years ago

    Honestly, if you take a drive from Yerushalayim to Ma’aleh Adumim, you will discover that the land is EMPTY…. not a sheep or shepherd or even a road or a store. They don’t really want or use it, they just don’t want us to have it. And, yes, the words from the Torah to Avraham was “Lecha etnenah”….

    Mendel32
    Mendel32
    7 years ago

    It’s about time the politicians caught on. It’s supposed to be irreversible! The Lubavitcher Rebbe said already in 1967 after the 6 day war, that the faster Israel makes events on the ground irreversible, the faster the Arabs will come to terms with Israel and make peace with us on OUR terms.

    7 years ago

    I understand Bibi capitulating to international pressure to sit down at the table. What I fail to understand is – who is the other side? The Palestinians are not originally from Israel. They never existed. There were Jordanians, and they made alliances with other Arab countries in their quest to murder every Jew they could find. Look throughout history – they chased us wherever to commit genocide.

    The Palestinians, even if we consider them a legitimate entity, never had a country. Even if they are entitled to one (which is both intellectually and morally idiotic), why does Israel have to give them a grain of sand? We never took their land (they did not have any). We captured it from Jordan when Jordan attacked us. Or are we going to lump this together with the Holocaust and glorify deniers?

    Lastly, these Palestinians have demonstrated they are nothing more than predator animals, no civility, no honesty, no morality. We should concede to them when they have never abandoned terror or conceded anything to us?

    Give them a spot in the middle of the ocean. They can take the rest of Islam along.

    7 years ago

    “settlements Israelis have built on occupied land in the West Bank and East Jerusalem over the past half-century.”

    Our land is occupied by the Arabs who wish to kill us Jews.

    BTW the West Bank is on the EAST side of Israel and the WEST side of Jordan who lost it during the Six Day War, it did NOT belong to the ‘Palestinians’ who wrongfully claim it.

    Israel tried several times to negotiate with Jordan to take it back but the Jordanians refused to. They also don’t care for the Palestinians.