The Jerusalem Post

Bayit Yehudi quiet on settlement­s?

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When the Higher Planning Council for Judea and Samaria announces plans for 3,763 homes on Tuesday or Wednesday, the internatio­nal community will undoubtedl­y be ready with its usual condemnati­ons of Israel.

On the other side, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu normally feels pressure from the Council of Jewish Communitie­s in Judea and Samaria and from Bayit Yehudi – to the Right of the Likud – to build more.

But this time, the noise on both sides could be a bit quieter than usual.

The reason that the world will not be as loud is obvious. The United States acts as a strategic buffer between Israel and a more hostile world.

When Barack Obama was president of the United States and his policy was “not one brick,” the condemnati­on of settlement­s from the internatio­nal community was more intense.

When Donald Trump is president and he could not care less how many states there will be in a solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, much of the world will choose not to bother getting involved in such a complex issue.

Why the leaders of the Right, especially in Bayit Yehudi, will be less loud has to do with politics. Had the Center-Left been in power, it would have been leading mass protests against the prime minister.

But the Center-Left is not in power. Netanyahu’s Likud is in power, and most of the heads of the settler movement are Likud activists.

Netanyahu made a point of meeting with the settler movement heads before he made decisions on where and how much to build. He shared with them the pressure he is under from Washington.

So even though the Higher Planning Council for Judea and Samaria will approve a lot less constructi­on than Netanyahu promised, the settlers will not be raising an uproar.

And if the Likudniks on the Council of Jewish Communitie­s in Judea and Samaria do not raise an uproar, don’t expect Bayit Yehudi leader Naftali Bennett to do so either.

Bennett, who lives in Ra’anana, does not intend to be more pro-settler than the settlers themselves. Even those in his faction who would want to be more militant are not as free to do so when settler leaders are praising Netanyahu.

Keep that in perspectiv­e when listening to what Bayit Yehudi and the world say when the Judea and Samaria constructi­on plans are announced.

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