Jerusalem – Israeli Settlements Have Grown During The Obama Years

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    FILE - in this Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2012 file photo, A Jewish settler looks at the West bank settlement of Maaleh Adumim, from the E-1 area on the eastern outskirts of Jerusalem. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner, File)Jerusalem – In his landmark speech to the Arab world seven years ago, President Barack Obama warned that Israeli settlements on occupied territories were undermining hopes for peace. “It is time for these settlements to stop,” he declared.

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    As Obama heads into the home stretch of his presidency, he leaves behind an unfulfilled vision. Not only did he fail to stop it, but he watched Israeli construction in the West Bank and east Jerusalem thrive — despite repeated White House condemnations.

    According to Israeli government data obtained by The Associated Press, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pushed a wave of construction during the Obama presidency that matched, and even exceeded, the amount of building that took place under his predecessors during the Bush years.

    The figures show the limits of U.S. influence over its close ally and a reluctance to link financial support to Israel with policy differences. Despite the Israeli defiance over settlements and a long history of friction between Obama and Netanyahu, the two countries signed a deal this week giving Israel $38 billion in U.S. military aid over 10 years, the largest deal of its kind in American history.

    Hanan Ashrawi, a senior Palestinian official, said the Obama presidency has been a disappointment for her people. After the promise of his 2009 speeches in Egypt and Turkey pledging to build bridges with the Muslim world, “it’s been downhill since then,” she said.

    Ashrawi said she was “not surprised at all” by the figures and dismissed U.S. criticism as lip service. “They did nothing to stop it. On the contrary, they looked the other way.”

    The settlement figures, obtained from Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics, show that 12,288 new settlement buildings were started in the West Bank during Obama’s term up to June 30, the most recent data available.

    In the first half of 2016 alone, work began on 1,195 housing units, figures released this week showed.

    Based on that pace of construction, the number could well exceed 13,000 housing units by the time Obama leaves office, not far behind the 14,636 begun during Bush’s two terms.

    Figures for east Jerusalem, where the Palestinians hope to establish their capital, show a similar story.

    According to data gathered by the anti-settlement watchdog group Peace Now, there were 3,915 housing starts during Obama’s term as of the end of 2015. Based on recent trends, by the time Obama leaves office that number will almost certainly surpass the 4,191 units started during the Bush years.

    Obama did manage to coax Israel into a partial settlement freeze in 2009 and 2010, briefly slowing down construction. In addition, much of the construction has been confined to major “blocs” and areas of Jerusalem that Israel expects to keep under any future peace deal. But to Palestinians, these distinctions make no difference.

    Israel captured the West Bank and east Jerusalem, along with the Gaza Strip, in the 1967 Mideast war. The Palestinians claim all three territories for an independent state alongside Israel, a position that has broad international backing.

    The U.S., along with the Palestinians and nearly all of the international community, considers settlements to be illegal or illegitimate, viewing them as obstacles to peace. Israel’s annexation of east Jerusalem is not internationally recognized.

    Over five decades, the Israeli settler population in the West Bank has grown to roughly 400,000 people in dozens of settlements, in addition to 200,000 others in areas of east Jerusalem. Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005, and the territory is now controlled by the Islamic militant group Hamas.

    Despite the stance that settlements are detrimental to peace, U.S. officials say the U.S. is committed to Israeli security, and that military aid cannot be linked to policy differences.

    “It wasn’t even hinted at during the discussions,” Israel’s acting national security adviser, Jacob Nagel, who negotiated the aid package, was quoted as saying by the Haaretz daily.

    In a statement marking the deal, Obama said the U.S. “will also continue to press for a two-state solution to the longstanding Israeli-Palestinian conflict, despite the deeply troubling trends on the ground that undermine this goal.”

    The White House declined to answer questions about the success or failure of its settlement policy. But a senior Obama administration official acknowledged the settlements have continued growing significantly during the Obama years. The official said the U.S. decided against linking the aid package to settlement policy, fearing such threats would embolden Israel’s enemies and decrease prospects for peace.

    The official declined to say whether Obama plans to take any action in his final months of office, but left open the possibility the U.S. would “carefully consider” supporting a U.N. resolution criticizing Israel if the occasion arose. The official was not authorized to speak on the record and requested anonymity.

    Peter Beinart, a liberal American commentator who has been an outspoken critic of the settlements, said Obama had missed an opportunity. He accused the president of “giving up” American leverage because for fear of angering the pro-Israel lobbying group AIPAC and its allies.

    “American policy toward Israel is a charade,” Beinart wrote in Haaretz.

    Bush enjoyed warm relations with Prime Ministers Ariel Sharon and Ehud Olmert during his term from 2001 to 2009. Obama has had a more contentious relationship with Netanyahu since both men took office in 2009. Yet both presidents took similar stances against the settlements, to little avail.

    Netanyahu, a longtime ally of the settlers, has dismissed the differences with the U.S. as a friendly disagreement. Last week, he angered his allies by comparing international calls to uproot settlements to “ethnic cleansing.”

    Hagit Ofran, a researcher at Peace Now, said a president’s influence is limited, and that ultimately the Israeli prime minister drives settlement policy. Ironically, she said, construction tends to increase when peace talks are taking place, apparently because negotiators are so focused on reaching a deal.

    In a way, the breakdown in talks over the past two years has restrained Netanyahu, she said.

    “Now, there is no political process, Netanyahu is exposed. Whatever he is doing gets the full attention,” she said.


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    12 Comments
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    AlbertEinstein
    AlbertEinstein
    7 years ago

    So much sheker and hypocrisy in this generation, it will have to be be’ito and not achishenah.

    Bimheira biyamainu.

    savtat
    savtat
    7 years ago

    The “settlements” have grown because Hashem runs the world.

    ayoyo
    ayoyo
    7 years ago

    Once an for all there is no such thing as an Arab state anywhere. The are large families and tribes that never had any cohesive states in a thousand years. The European states made a map in the 1920’s in which they made geographical boundaries of land masses , in which were placed different peoples that were meant to be hostile to their neighbors in order to be exploited by Europe for their natural resources .

    ayoyo
    ayoyo
    7 years ago

    There is no Israel- Palestinian conflict .The Palestinian Arabs want to have the whole pie without any Jews living among them. If the ever get a ‘state’ they will be busy killing each other and stealing all of the money given to them.

    7 years ago

    Well, Bibi does exactly what he wants not whats to the safety of his constituents. He made it abundantly clear that Rak Bedam. He doesnt give a flying hoot for any person. These radical (sometimes innocent) settlers are willing to risk their lives and play into Bibis hands, so why not?? From the Torah perspective, Bibi is a total secular person at the helm of the so called Jewish Land. What a sad hypocrisy!

    ALTERG3
    ALTERG3
    7 years ago

    & the bigshot israel keep on saying he is a sona yisroel.

    7 years ago

    Bupkis. Bibi could not take Obama seriously, because Obama y”sh supported terror. He demanded concessions from Israel, while never ever denouncing terror. On the contrary, Obama looked for every reason to ignore Israel’s needs, and looked for every excuse to encourage Muslims. Bush could at least ask Israel about settlements (as wrong as it was) because he could interact. He was supportive of Israel, and clearly anti-terror. Obama never was anti-terror. Glad he’s leaving. But I will never trust another Democrat in the WH.

    ayinglefunadorf
    ayinglefunadorf
    7 years ago

    The settlements are growing B”H and Obama is paying more money than ever to Israel. Thank You Mr President. Everyone is Happy.

    ALTERG3
    ALTERG3
    7 years ago

    & the bigshot israel keep on saying he is a sona yisroel.

    ISAAC
    ISAAC
    7 years ago

    The headline should be ‘smart and clever Bibi outsmarts the dumb liberal US president Barak Chusain Obama in a run of 8 years’

    ISAAC
    ISAAC
    7 years ago

    The headline should be ‘smart and clever Bibi outsmarts the dumb liberal US president Barak Chusain Obama in a run of 8 years’

    7 years ago

    As if it was any thanks to the Muslim Obama.