Baltimore Sun Sunday

Settlers knock holes in Trump’s map

US plan may not help Netanyahu in Monday’s election

- By Isabel Kershner

YITZHAR, West Bank — For the residents of the hilltop Jewish settlement of Yitzhar, President Donald Trump’s recently published plan for Middle East peace comes with a blessing and a curse.

For many, it fulfills a lifelong dream: U.S. recognitio­n of the biblical promise and legitimacy of the settlement­s in the occupied West Bank, allowing Israel to annex them while flouting decades of internatio­nal consensus that they violate internatio­nal law.

“The whole narrative has changed,” said Matanya Gavrieli, 27, a member of Yitzhar’s leadership council. “A president of the United States came along and said the people of Israel have the right to be here.”

But what many of the settlers object to is that the plan leaves Yitzhar and 14 other isolated settlement­s, including some of the most ideologica­lly hard-line ones, as enclaves surrounded by a Palestinia­n ministate, tethered to Israel by narrow arteries.

Standing by Trump’s side during the recent rollout of the plan at the White House, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel proudly announced that he would annex the settlement­s and that not a single settler would have to be uprooted, a pitch that was expected to increase his chances in Israel’s election Monday.

But if Netanyahu hoped this plum from Washington would win Likud the crucial votes it needs to ensure a right-wing victory after two inconclusi­ve elections in April and September, they were unlikely to come from settler stronghold­s like this one.

The idea of a Palestinia­n state surroundin­g Israeli settlement­s was dangerous, Gavrieli said, however faroff that state may be. The Palestinia­ns have rejected the plan, which is seen as heavily weighted toward Israel.

“It will be impossible to provide security to the residents,” Gavrieli said. “It’s absurd. It’s another way of saying ‘Get up and leave.’ ”

The Palestinia­ns were not happy with the Trump map either.

President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinia­n Authority compared its proposed Palestinia­n state to “Swiss cheese.”

Regardless, Netanyahu has campaigned hard to convince his base that only a right-wing government led by his conservati­ve Likud party can capitalize on the plan by moving quickly and unilateral­ly to extend Israeli sovereignt­y to the settlement­s and the strategic Jordan Valley.

Signaling their serious intent, a U.S.-Israeli team charged with the preparator­y work of mapping the exact areas to be annexed convened for the first time last week in the settlement of Ariel.

Yet all this appears to have had little effect on voters.

“It was clearly timed to have a political impact,” Reuven Hazan, a political scientist and professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, said of the Trump plan. “But for all of that, nothing has happened.”

Pre-election opinion polls again show Netanyahu, Israel’s longest serving prime minister, in a virtual tie with his main rival,

Benny Gantz, of the centrist Blue and White party. Neither Netanyahu’s right-wing religious alliance nor the center-left bloc appears to have a clear path to forming a majority government.

The plan may have helped distract the public from Netanyahu’s legal troubles: Charged with bribery, fraud and breach of trust in three corruption cases, his trial is set to open March 17.

Gantz’s endorsemen­t of the plan, at least as a basis for negotiatio­ns, made it less partisan but also blurred the lines between his party and Likud. Netanyahu has mockingly referred to Gantz as a “Bibi from AliExpress,” using his own nickname to denigrate his rival as a cheap imitation of himself.

To remain in power, Netanyahu needs Likud to be the largest party and for the right wing-religious bloc to beat the center-left bloc. In the last two elections, however, the pro-settlement parties squandered votes because of internal squabbling and political fragmentat­ion, a result that could easily repeat itself Monday.

In September, more than 58% of Yitzhar’s voters cast their ballots for Jewish Strength, a tiny extreme right-wing party that advocates Jewish sovereignt­y over the entire West Bank and other occupied territorie­s and the transfer of “enemies of Israel,” meaning Palestinia­ns, to neighborin­g Arab countries.

But the party failed to win enough support to enter Parliament, and the more than 80,000 votes it garnered went to waste. The party has insisted on running again, despite Netanyahu’s pleas for it to drop out of the race and channel its voters to him or allied rightwing parties large enough to be assured of representa­tion.

Yitzhar, southwest of the Palestinia­n city of Nablus, is home to the Od Yosef Chai seminary, whose students have a reputation for violence against Palestinia­n villages and for clashing with Israeli security forces who try to curtail their activities. Some Yitzhar voters are now deliberati­ng between the pro-settlement Yamina party and the ultraOrtho­dox United Torah Judaism.

“In the big picture Netanyahu did great things,” said Yechiel Klein, 37, another member of Yitzhar’s council. “But we’d like to see a stronger stand on the things we believe in.”

Those, he said, include the recognitio­n that “We are the landlords. It’s all our land.”

Itamar, another would-be settlement enclave southeast of Nablus, has had its share of bloodshed. Its vulnerabil­ity was exposed in 2011 when two Palestinia­n teenagers from a nearby village slipped into a home and stabbed five members of the Fogel family to death in their beds, including a 3month-old baby. At least 20 residents have been killed in attacks since the settlement was establishe­d in 1984.

Moshe and Leah Goldsmith, both 56 and Yamina voters, were among the first families to move in. Born and raised in the New York City borough of Brooklyn, their living room window looks out onto Mount Gerizim and Mount Ebal, the mountains framing Nablus where, according to the Bible, the Israelites delivered blessings and curses.

“Any plan with a mention of a Palestinia­n state is a tragedy,” Moshe Goldsmith said. “We want peace, but we are not willing to commit suicide, and we will never agree to something like that, giving up our homeland.”

“It will be impossible to provide security to the residents. It’s absurd.” — Matanya Gavrieli, 27, of the Yitzhars

 ?? DANIEL ROLIDER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? An Israeli works on a vineyard in Yitzhar, a West Bank settlement. The Palestinia­n village of Madama is in the background.
DANIEL ROLIDER/THE NEW YORK TIMES An Israeli works on a vineyard in Yitzhar, a West Bank settlement. The Palestinia­n village of Madama is in the background.

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