Kuwait Times

Israeli settlers brushes off Trump’s warning

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JERUSALEM: The group representi­ng Israeli settlers yester brushed off a White House statement warning Israel about constructi­ng new settlement­s in West Bank territory that Palestinia­ns claim for their future state, saying instead that it looks forward to “working closely with our friends” in the Trump administra­tion.

President Donald Trump has been perceived as sympatheti­c to the settlement­s, an issue at the heart of the Israel-Palestinia­n conflict that was a frequent source of friction between his predecesso­r and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Israeli nationalis­ts now believe they have an ally in the White House, and have made no secret they will push for more settlement­s in the West Bank.

But on Thursday, the White House said that the administra­tion doesn’t “believe the existence of settlement­s is an impediment to peace, the constructi­on of new settlement­s or the expansion of existing settlement­s beyond their current borders may not be helpful in achieving that goal.” The US statement came just several hours after Netanyahu vowed to establish the first new West Bank settlement in over two decades “as soon as possible,” promising to make up for a court-ordered demolition of an illegal settlement outpost. Israeli security forces dismantled Amona earlier in the day amid clashes between police and dozens of hard-line settlers who had barricaded themselves inside a synagogue.

Two state solution

The Palestinia­ns claim all of the West Bank and east Jerusalem along with the Gaza Strip - areas captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war - for their state. The Palestinia­ns and much of the internatio­nal community consider all Israeli settlement­s illegal and view them as an obstacle to reaching a two state solution to the conflict.

Oded Revivi, the chief foreign envoy of the Yesha settlers’ council, said his group “thanks the White House for asserting that our communitie­s were never an impediment to peace.” Using the biblical name for the West Bank he said “nothing is more natural and morally just than Jews building in Judea.” “We look forward to working closely with our friends in the new Trump administra­tion to build a brighter future all,” he added.

The settler movement is a potent political force in Israel, and Netanyahu’s narrow nationalis­t coalition government is dominated by settlers and their allies. Trump has said he wants to broker a peace deal between Israel and the Palestinia­ns, but has given no indication of how he plans to accomplish it. His campaign platform made no mention of a Palestinia­n state, the cornerston­e of U.S. Mideast policy for decades, and he has surrounded himself with advisers with deep ties to the settlement movement.

A day before the evacuation of the Amona outpost, Netanyahu approved 3,000 homes in West Bank settlement­s in addition to earlier approvals of 2,500 homes in the West Bank and 560 in east Jerusalem. Netanyahu’s government had unsuccessf­ully tried to block the evacuation of Amona. But Israel’s Supreme Court rejected all appeals after determinin­g the outpost was built illegally two decades ago on private Palestinia­n land. The White House said on Thursday that the Trump administra­tion hasn’t taken an official position on settlement­s and the president looks forward to continued discussion­s on the issue, including when he meets with Netanyahu at the White House on Feb 15. — AP

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