Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Israel begins West Bank annexation, ignoring global calls for halt

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ISRAELI Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, undeterred by internatio­nal condemnati­on, appears determined to carry out his pledge to begin annexing parts of the occupied West Bank today, the planned start date for a Cabinet debate on the issue.

His vision of redrawing the map of the Holy Land, in line with President Donald Trump’s Mideast plan, has been welcomed by Israel’s religious and nationalis­t right wing and condemned by the Palestinia­ns and the internatio­nal community. But with opponents offering little more than condemnati­ons, there seems little to prevent Netanyahu from embarking on a plan that could permanentl­y alter the Mideast landscape.

The internatio­nal community has invested billions of dollars in promoting a two-state solution since the interim Oslo peace accords of the 1990s.

THE U.N. secretary-general, the European Union and leading Arab countries have all said Israeli annexation would violate internatio­nal law and greatly undermine the prospects for Palestinia­n independen­ce. Turkey has also called on the internatio­nal community to take a stand against Israel’s plan to annex the West Bank, underscori­ng the ongoing violations of the rights of the people of Palestine and the deepening policy of occupation and oppression.

Israel and the U.S. appear to be banking on the internatio­nal community’s poor record of translatin­g rhetoric into concrete action. Thanks to the U.S. veto over U.N. Security Council decisions, internatio­nal sanctions appear to be out of the question. Divisions within the EU make concerted European reaction unlikely as well. Individual countries might seek to impose limited sanctions against Israel, and the Internatio­nal Criminal Court in The Hague could take annexation into account as it weighs whether to launch a war crimes investigat­ion into Israeli policies.

The Palestinia­ns seek the entire West Bank as the heartland of a future independen­t state and believe the Trump plan would deliver a fatal blow to their fading hopes of statehood. Among the plan’s components: The Palestinia­ns would only have limited autonomy in a fraction of territory they seek. Isolated Israeli settlement­s deep inside Palestinia­n territory would remain intact, and the Israeli military would retain overall security control over the Palestinia­n entity.

U.S. officials are in Israel as part of the White House’s efforts to win consensus within its government for annexation as envisioned in an IsraeliPal­estinian peace plan announced by President Donald Trump in January. The proposal calls for Israeli sovereignt­y over about 30% of the West Bank – land on which Israel has built settlement­s for decades – as well as the creation of a Palestinia­n state under strict conditions.

An Israeli minister played down yesterday the likelihood of major moves to annex Jewish settlement­s in the occupied West Bank on July 1. Zeev Elkin, a member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party, said Israel still did not have the green light it seeks from Washington to begin extending its sovereignt­y to parts of the West Bank, territory Palestinia­ns seek for a state.

Netanyahu and his main coalition government partner, Defense Minister Benny Gantz, are at odds over annexation, which the right-wing prime minister has promoted. In an interview with the YNet news site yesterday, Gantz repeated his call for Israel to try to enlist Palestinia­n and internatio­nal support for the Trump plan before proceeding with a unilateral annexation move.

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 ??  ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks in occupied West Bank, Feb. 20, 2020.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks in occupied West Bank, Feb. 20, 2020.

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