Houston Chronicle

Israel OKs plans for West Bank housing units

Palestinia­ns aren’t placated by approval seen as gesture to U.S.

- By Isabel Kershner

JERUSALEM — In a rare step, Israel approved plans late Tuesday to build 715 housing units for Palestinia­ns in the occupied West Bank, though the government soon is expected to endorse 6,800 units for Jewish settlers there, too.

About 3,700 settler housing units have already been approved this year, and the addition of 6,800 would push 2019 past the record for approvals in a single year. The news comes as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is campaignin­g for support from right-wing voters, including settlers, less than six weeks before a parliament­ary election.

With Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, visiting the region to lay more groundwork for the administra­tion’s plan to resolve the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, the approval of Palestinia­n housing is seen in Israel as a gesture that will please the Americans.

But it did nothing to placate the Palestinia­n leadership, which has already rejected any U.S. peace plan, arguing that the Trump team is hopelessly biased toward Israel. The Palestinia­ns and much of the rest of the world consider the Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank, home to more than 400,000 people, to be illegal and a barrier to any peace settlement.

“The Israeli government, headed by Benjamin Netanyahu, proves day after day that it is dealing with the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s” as a region for more settlement, in effect building “a Jewish state for settlers on the West Bank,” the Palestinia­n Authority’s Foreign Affairs Ministry said in a statement.

The Palestinia­n housing units would go up in what is known as Area C, covering more than 60 percent of the West Bank, where Israel maintains full civilian and security control. Only a few dozen permits for Palestinia­n buildings in that area have been approved in the last decade, the last in 2016, according to Peace Now, an Israeli left-wing advocacy group that tracks settlement constructi­on.

Many settlers hope — and Palestinia­ns fear — that Israel aims to annex much of that territory.

Shani Sasson, a spokeswoma­n for the Coordinato­r of Government Activities in the Territorie­s, the Israeli security agency that deals with Palestinia­n civil affairs, said that an Israeli military planning committee would convene in the next week or two to promote plans for 6,800 units in the Jewish settlement­s.

Israeli political analysts said that the approval of housing for Palestinia­ns appeared timed to Kushner’s visit and was meant to help him sell a long-awaited peace plan to Arab leaders.

David M. Friedman, the U.S. ambassador to Israel and an architect of the administra­tion’s plan, told CNN in an interview Tuesday: “We spent lots of time speaking to the Israelis about improving conditions in the West Bank and Gaza. A lot.”

There has been speculatio­n in Israel that the Trump administra­tion might begin to roll out its plan before the election, possibly at a summit meeting to be attended by Arab leaders. White House officials said Wednesday that, as yet, no such meeting was planned.

After an inconclusi­ve election in April, Netanyahu was unable to form a governing coalition, forcing him to call another election Sept. 17. He has been urging right-wing voters, including settlers, to vote for his conservati­ve Likud party, rather than smaller parties to the right, to ensure that he will be in a position to lead the next government.

“No settlement and no settler will ever be uprooted,” Netanyahu pledged during a visit to the settlement of Efrat, south of Jerusalem, on Tuesday.

That statement staked out a maximalist position that appeared to preclude both the establishm­ent of a contiguous Palestinia­n state alongside Israel — a long-standing Palestinia­n and internatio­nal goal — and the engagement of the Palestinia­n leadership in renewed peace talks.

Friedman told CNN that the administra­tion believes in Palestinia­n autonomy, short of independen­t statehood.

“We believe in Palestinia­n civilian self-governance,” he said. “We believe that autonomy should be extended up until the point where it interferes with Israeli security.”

 ?? Matty Stern / AFP/Getty Images ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, second from right, meets with U.S. Senior Adviser Jared Kushner, third from right, and U.S. Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, second from left, at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem.
Matty Stern / AFP/Getty Images Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, second from right, meets with U.S. Senior Adviser Jared Kushner, third from right, and U.S. Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, second from left, at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States