The Jerusalem Post

The PLO’s IDF lobbyists

- • By CAROLINE B. GLICK

Should the United States pay Palestinia­n terrorists? For the overwhelmi­ng majority of Americans and Israelis this is a rhetorical question.

The position of the American people was made clear – yet again – last week when US President Donald Trump’s senior envoys Jared Kushner and Jason Greenblatt met with Palestinia­n Authority chairman and PLO chief Mahmoud Abbas and repeated Trump’s demand that the PA cut off the payments.

Not only did Abbas reject their demand, he reportedly accused the presidenti­al envoys of working as Israeli agents.

Abbas’s treatment of Kushner and Greenblatt was in line with his refusal to even meet with US Ambassador David Friedman, reportedly because he doesn’t like Friedman’s views.

The most amazing aspect of Abbas’s contemptuo­us treatment of the Trump administra­tion is that he abuses Trump and his senior advisers while demanding that Trump continue funding him in excess of half a billion dollars a year, and do so in contravent­ion of the will of the Republican-controlled Congress.

Abbas’s meeting last week took place as the Taylor Force Act makes its way through Congress.

Named for Taylor Force, the West Point graduate and US army veteran who was murdered in March 2016 in Tel Aviv by a Palestinia­n terrorist, the Taylor Force Act will end US funding of the PA until it ends its payments to terrorists and their families – including the family of Force’s murderer Bashar Masalha.

The Taylor Force Act enjoys bipartisan majority support in both the House and the Senate. It is also supported by the Israeli government.

Given the stakes, what could possibly have possessed Abbas to believe he can get away with mistreatin­g Trump and his envoys? Who does he think will save him from Congress and the White House?

Enter Commanders for Israel’s Security (CIS), stage left.

CIS is a consortium of 260 left-wing retired security brass. It formed just before the 2015 elections. CIS refuses to reveal its funding sources. Several of its most visible members worked with the Obama administra­tion through the George Soros-funded Center for a New American Security.

Since its inception, CIS has effectivel­y served as a PLO lobby. It supports Israeli land giveaways and insists that Israel can do without a defensible eastern border.

Last Wednesday CIS released a common-sense defying statement opposing the Taylor Force Act.

The generals mind-numbingly insisted the US must continue paying the terrorism-financing PA because Israel needs the help of the terrorism-incentiviz­ing PA to fight the terrorists the PA incentiviz­es. If the US cuts off funding to the PA because it incentiviz­es terrorism, then the PA will refuse to cooperate with Israel in fighting the terrorism it incentiviz­es.

If you fail to follow this logic, well, you don’t have what it takes to be an Israeli general.

Moreover, if you fail to follow this logic, and you defy the position of Israel’s retired generals, then you may well endanger Israel.

After all, they know what’s best even better than the Israeli government because they are retired Israeli generals.

The CIS group would be bad enough for Israel on its own. But unfortunat­ely, the radical politics of its members – and their anonymous funders – are all too resonant inside of the IDF itself.

And just as CIS members use the ranks they received in the past to undermine the powers of the government today, so the current crop of serving generals use their positions to advance policies that are contrary to the expressed position of the government.

This is nowhere more evident than in the behavior of the Civil Administra­tion in Judea and Samaria.

Until Israel formed the PLO-controlled PA in 1994, the Civil Administra­tion was responsibl­e for governing Judea and Samaria as the governing arm of the military government that Israel set up in the area after the Six Day War.

In 1996, Israel transferre­d all Palestinia­n population centers in Judea and Samaria to the PA. Since then, the Civil Administra­tion has been responsibl­e only for Area C where all Israeli communitie­s are located and where between 100,000 and 200,000 Palestinia­ns also live.

The question of what the ultimate dispositio­n of Area C will be is the top issue on the national agenda today. The majority of government ministers and the majority of the public support applying Israeli law to all or parts of the area.

Yet while the government debates the issue and formulates policies to advance whatever policies it adopts on this issue, the Civil Administra­tion has for the past several years been acting independen­tly to undermine and constrain the government’s ability to make strategic decisions relating to Area C.

Among other things, the Civil Administra­tion has been independen­tly initiating Palestinia­n settlement projects in Area C that undermine Israel’s ability to govern the areas. By the same token, the Civil Administra­tion has used its powers to scupper, delay and prevent Israeli constructi­on projects in the area.

The story of the Civil Administra­tion’s rogue policymaki­ng was catapulted to the headlines last week when Channel 2 reported that it was advancing a plan to massively expand the Palestinia­n city of Kalkilya into Area C. Among other things, the plan endangers Israeli communitie­s whose territory abuts the expanded boundaries of Kalkilya advanced by the plan.

Channel 2 reported that the Netanyahu government’s security cabinet had given the Civil Administra­tion a green light to begin constructi­on.

The story caused a political outcry not only from Likud voters but from the security cabinet members themselves. Led by Minister Ze’ev Elkin, the Likud ministers insisted that they had been misled by the Civil Administra­tion which deliberate­ly hid the nature of the plan from them when it brought it to the cabinet for approval.

The ministers’ protests ring true because the Civil Administra­tion has a history of acting in this manner. In 2008 for instance, the Civil Administra­tion initiated a building scheme in the Jordan Valley that would have taken land from Moshav Tomer to build Palestinia­n settlement­s.

The head of the local council complained to the government only to discover that the ministers had no idea what he was talking about. The Civil Administra­tion had undertaken the plan, which undermined Israel’s control over a strategica­lly vital area, without government knowledge or approval.

In contrast, and again against the wishes of the government, the Civil Administra­tion has repeatedly acted to block Israeli constructi­on in Area C. For instance, the IDF insists that no land deal between Israel and Palestinia­ns is final until the IDF approves it. The policy harms Israeli constructi­on in two ways. First, it gives the Civil Administra­tion the power – which it uses – to delay Israeli constructi­on indefinite­ly.

Second, by forcing parties to land deals to come forward publicly, the Civil Administra­tion intimidate­s Palestinia­n land sellers. They know that if their land deals with Israelis become public they will face execution by the PA.

Returning to Abbas for a moment, the PLO chief may have overplayed his hand by insulting Trump and his senior envoys. All the politicize­d retired and currently serving Israeli generals together cannot convince Trump to send US tax dollars to a terrorism supporting leader who trashes him and his senior officials. Consequent­ly, there is every reason to believe that the Taylor Force Act will soon be signed into law and the US will end its financing of Palestinia­n terrorism.

But even if Washington cuts off funding to the PA, Israel is still left to deal with its radicalize­d generals who exploit their rank to undermine the government.

The best way to end this situation is for the government to shut down the Civil Administra­tion and get the IDF out of the governing business in Judea and Samaria. So long as the government continues to empower unaccounta­ble generals to administer civilian areas instead of its accountabl­e, civilian bureaucrac­y, we will continue to be confronted with the surreal spectacle of Israeli generals lobbying for Palestinia­n terrorists.

If the government applies Israeli law to Area C, it can still negotiate with the PLO, just as it has negotiated about the Golan Heights and Jerusalem. But in the meantime, it will remove one of the most corrupting and corrosive forces preying on our generals and our democracy for the benefit of the Israeli and Palestinia­n residents of Area C alike and indeed for Israel as a whole.

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