The Phnom Penh Post

How Israeli settlement­s arrived at crucial juncture with Palestinia­ns

- Griff Witte Shiloh, West Bank

THROUGH eight years of escalating criticism from the world’s most powerful leader, Israeli constructi­on in these sacred, militarily occupied hills never stopped.

Thousands of homes were built. Miles of roadway. Restaurant­s. Shopping malls. A university.

And here in Shiloh, a tourist centre went up, with a welcome video in which the biblical figure Joshua commands the Jewish people to settle the land promised to them by God.

Israeli settlement­s may be illegal in the eyes of the UN Security Council and a major obstacle to Middle East peace in the view of the Obama administra­tion.

But every day they become a more entrenched reality on land that Palestinia­ns say should rightfully belong to them. As the parched beige hilltops fill with red-tiled homes, decades of internatio­nal efforts to achieve a twostate solution are unravellin­g.

And global condemnati­ons notwithsta­nding, the trend is poised to accelerate. Already, Israel has a rightwing government that boasts it is more supportive of settlement constructi­on than any in the country’s short history. Within weeks, it will also have as an ally as US president, Donald Trump, who has signalled he could make an extraordin­ary break with decades of US policy and end US objections to the settlement­s.

The combinatio­n has delighted settlers across the West Bank who express hope for a building boom that would kill off notions of a Palestinia­n state once and for all.

“If America interferes less, everything will be much easier,” said Shivi Drori, 43, who runs a winery in a Jewish outpost deep in the West Bank that the Israeli government considers officially off-limits to building but has tacitly backed. “I’d like to see bigger settlement­s. Major cities.”

Trump, Drori predicts, will help make that a reality simply by looking the other way. “Obama was very confrontat­ional,” Drori said. “The Trump administra­tion seems much more sympatheti­c.”

Israel’s military conquered the West Bank in a matter of days 50 years ago this June in a war against neighbouri­ng Arab states. But settling the land has been the work of generation­s, accomplish­ed hilltop by hilltop as temporary encampment­s and caravans have given way to suburban-style homes rooted firmly in the bedrock.

All the while, much of the world has opposed the settlement­s as an illegal infringeme­nt on occupied land. US government­s – Democrat and Republican alike – have urged Israel to halt the project and allow negotiatio­ns to dictate control of land that Palestinia­ns say is vital to the viability of a future state.

Today, some 400,000 Israelis live in roughly 150 settlement­s scattered across the West Bank. That’s up from fewer than 300,000 when Barack Obama was elected.

An additional 200,000 Israelis live in East Jerusalem, which Palestinia­ns want as their future capital.

Unable to halt settlement growth, a frustrated Obama administra­tion lashed out late last month with a twin-barrelled diplomatic assault.

First, Washington abstained in a UN Security Council vote that demanded Israel end all settlement activity – enabling the resolution’s passage. Days later, Secretary of State John Kerry delivered an impassione­d speech accusing Israel of putting the two-state solution “in serious jeopardy” by building “in the middle of what, by any reasonable definition, would be the future Palestinia­n state”.

Rather than be chastened by the criticism, Israel’s government was furious. Settlers, meanwhile, brush it off as an irrelevanc­e.

“There’s no implicatio­n,” said Oded Revivi, chief foreign envoy for the Yesha Council, which represents settlers.

Kerry, Revivi said, is fixated on an idea that, because of decades of Palestinia­n violence and intransige­nce, can never become reality – two states for two peoples between the Jordan River and the Mediterran­ean Sea.

Revivi instead has his eyes fixed on the incoming Trump administra­tion, which has signalled it will abandon US attempts at evenhanded­ness in the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict and throw its weight squarely behind Israel.

“Stay strong Israel, January 20th is fast approachin­g!” Trump tweeted before the Kerry speech.

Trump and his advisers “have learned from President Obama’s experience”, Revivi said. “They’re not going to go into a swamp just for the sake of saying they’re in it.”

Revivi, who is also mayor of Efrat, a settlement that is poised to grow from 10,000 to 16,000, has good reason to think so.

Trump’s pick for ambassador to Israel, New York bankruptcy lawyer David Friedman, has expressed positions on the settlement­s that are further to the right even than those of Israel’s hardline prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu.

Friedman, for instance, has argued in favour of Israeli annexation of the West Bank, long a fringe position but one now gaining currency as the political stars align against the twostate solution.

“Everyone who talks about a Palestinia­n state today knows it will not happen,” said Naftali Bennett, Israel’s education minister and leader of the right-wing Jewish Home party.

Instead, Bennett argues for unilateral Israeli annexation of “Area C” – the 60 percent of West Bank land where Israeli settlement­s are concentrat­ed. The vast majority of the West Bank’s 2.5 million Palestinia­ns live in Areas A and B, where Bennett says they should be able to have autonomy but not a state.

“We have to say, ‘This is what we want, and this is what we are going to do’,” he said. “You can’t go on saying how the world is wrong, this is ours, and then at the end you forget to kick the ball into the net.”

It’s not clear whether Netanyahu will be willing to go as far as his education minister, an ally at times but a fierce rival at others. Netanyahu is still on record supporting a two-state solution, albeit grudgingly.

But the fact that annexation is be- ing discussed at all shows how far Israeli public sentiment has shifted in the settlers’ direction.

On the fast-shrinking left of Israeli politics, such ideas are regarded as an overreach that threatens Israel’s core democratic and Jewish identities as the Palestinia­n population grows.

“As a patriotic Israeli, I think it’s in the crucial interest of the state of Israel to get out of the West Bank,” said Talia Sasson, president of the New Israel Fund. “Otherwise we can’t maintain our basic principles.”

Human rights advocates insist those principles have already been trampled by a decades-long policy designed to maximise land for Jewish settlement and make life as difficult as possible for Palestinia­ns.

Adam Aloni, a researcher for the advocacy group B’Tselem, said Israel had already carried out “de facto annexation” in the West Bank by building a network of roads and other barriers that isolate Palestinia­ns in an archipelag­o of disconnect­ed towns and cities.

“Israel is creating Palestinia­n ghettos, islands of land that are doomed to failure without basic resources,” he said.

One such island is the poor, litterstre­wn village of Salem, where resi- dents say their water supplies have been choked off by adjacent settlement­s and their access to farmland severely restricted.

“The settlers tell me, ‘You’re not allowed to be here’,” said Shareef Shtyah, a 33-year-old shepherd who’s had to cull his herd of sheep from 400 to 15 because the Israelis bar his access to traditiona­l grazing areas. “I tell them, ‘You’re the ones who aren’t allowed to be here’.”

The Obama administra­tion may have been sympatheti­c to Shtyah’s plight. But Palestinia­ns express disappoint­ment that Obama wasn’t able to help them secure many achievemen­ts. And they have few illusions that they will get any support from Trump.

“He has the mentality of blindly supporting Israel,” said Ghassan Daghlas, the Palestinia­n Authority’s point person on settlement­s in the northern West Bank. “It’s not been a promising start.” As with so many things, it looks just the opposite to the settlers.

In Shiloh, a settler community of 3,200 a few kilometres down the road from Salem, residents mark the site of what they believe to be an ancient Jewish capital with a newly constructe­d archaeolog­y museum and visitors centre. Tens of thousands of people visit annually, including tourists from the United States.

Freshly built homes and restaurant­s dot thriving new neighbourh­oods catering to Israelis seeking to connect with the biblical lands of their ancestors – or maybe to just get a better quality of life at a cut-rate price.

Even the developmen­ts that are not entirely legal by Israeli standards, much less internatio­nal ones, boast finely paved roads, soaring electricit­y pylons and reliable water supplies – all courtesy of the Israeli government. And at all times, of course, Israeli soldiers stand guard.

Life here is good, residents say, but it will be even better when Trump takes charge.

“It could have been two or three times as much” developmen­t had it not been for pressure from the Obama administra­tion, said Eliana Passentin, who raises her eight children atop a ridge with sweeping views from the river to the sea. “People want to come here and build homes and build companies and build schools. We’ve been restricted in expanding our community. Now we’ll have more freedom.”

 ?? DAVID VAAKNIN/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Houses in the Jewish settlement of Efrat in the West Bank are seen in the distance through a fence at a constructi­on site on Friday.
DAVID VAAKNIN/THE WASHINGTON POST Houses in the Jewish settlement of Efrat in the West Bank are seen in the distance through a fence at a constructi­on site on Friday.
 ?? GRIFF WITTE/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Shareef Shtyah, a 33-year-old Palestinia­n shepherd, says he had to cull his herd of sheep from 400 to 15 because the Israelis bar his access to traditiona­l grazing areas.
GRIFF WITTE/THE WASHINGTON POST Shareef Shtyah, a 33-year-old Palestinia­n shepherd, says he had to cull his herd of sheep from 400 to 15 because the Israelis bar his access to traditiona­l grazing areas.

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