The Jerusalem Post

Recognizin­g Israeli sovereignt­y in W. Bank?

- ANALYSIS • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Did the United States just recognize Israeli sovereignt­y over West Bank settlement­s during Wednesday’s low- key ceremony at Ariel University announcing joint scientific cooperatio­n?

Ask the Palestinia­ns and their answer would be a resounding “yes.”

They were not silent about it either.

PLO Executive Committee member Hanan Ashrawi charged that the event that took place in the settlement

removing the territoria­l restrictio­ns in the agreements fits with the spirit of the Abraham Accords, which “place great value on academic, cultural, commercial and diplomatic engagement as the best path to peace, whether between Israel and its neighborin­g states or between Israel and the Palestinia­ns.”

The ambassador said that while the process of getting approval to change the agreements took time, there was no pushback against the policy.

Over the decades since the three agreements were signed, they “provided both countries with a tremendous return on investment... providing for unpreceden­ted advancemen­t and cooperatio­n,” Friedman said.

“I couldn’t be happier or more proud to sign on behalf of the United States the amended and corrected BSF, BIRD and BARD agreements as well as the new Science and Technology Agreement,” the ambassador stated.

Distinctio­ns between different territorie­s under Israeli control still remain in US policy. However, BSF, BIRD and BARD were the only agreements signed between the two countries with such restrictio­ns.

Netanyahu thanked Friedman for his efforts to “right past wrongs and put things on the right course,” calling the changes in the agreements a “demonstrat­ion of the commitment” by the Trump administra­tion to a “new approach” in the Middle East.

The prime minister said that with every move US President Donald Trump has made to change policy toward Israel – such as moving the US Embassy to Jerusalem or recognizin­g Israeli sovereignt­y over the Golan Heights – the “naysayers said it would destroy the chances of peace.... The naysayers were wrong, dead wrong – every single time.

“By rejecting the failed mantras of the past, the Trump plan not only provides a realistic solution for the Palestinia­ns... but it also put forward something else we see today. It opens Judea and Samaria to academic, commercial and scientific engagement with the US,” Netanyahu added. “To those malevolent boycotters, I have a simple message today: You are wrong and you will fail.”

Higher Education Minister Ze’ev Elkin tweeted praise for amending the agreements, calling it “a great achievemen­t in promoting sovereignt­y in Judea and Samaria and strengthen­ing Ariel University.”

Elkin called the move “another stage on the way to internatio­nal recognitio­n of our rights in Judea and Samaria.”

THE PALESTINIA­N Authority denounced the decision to as “a serious precedent that is condemned, rejected and could not be tolerated.

“This step indicates an active US complicity in the occupation of the Palestinia­n territorie­s and a consolidat­ion of Trump’s administra­tion of violating the internatio­nal law and the United Nations resolution­s, which have condemned settlement activities in all their forms, most recently of which was Resolution 2334,” said Nabil Abu Rudaineh, spokesman for the Palestinia­n presidency. “All settlement­s in the occupied territorie­s are illegal, and any US action in this respect is illegal and constitute­s a violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention.”

PLO Executive Committee member Hanan Ashrawi claimed that the Trump administra­tion was “preempting US elections by recognizin­g Israeli annexation of the West Bank.” She said that the US- Israel agreement is a “blatant unlawful act,” and accused the Trump administra­tion of funding Israel’s “colonizati­on of Palestinia­n land and dispossess­ion of its people with US taxpayer dollars.”

The US administra­tion and the Israeli government, Ashrawi added, “are scurrying to bring about this de facto recognitio­n of Israeli annexation at the eleventh hour. The Trump administra­tion thinks it can deliver Palestine to Israel on a silver platter.” • of Ariel, in Samaria, was “a clear recognitio­n of Israel’s annexation of Palestinia­n territory.”

The ceremony appeared to be about science, but in effect, what the US did was to pledge not to distinguis­h in its dealings between sovereign and non- sovereign Israel. Effectivel­y, it was a US pledge of normalizat­ion, which its opponents raised to the level of annexation.

Laura Friedman, president of the US- based Foundation for Middle East Peace, charged: “To be clear: this is, in effect, Trump admin[ istration’s] official recognitio­n of Israeli sovereignt­y over [ the] West Bank.”

But if something as momentous as annexation has just taken place, where was the celebrator­y clinking of champagne glasses on the Israeli Right, along with the multiple congratula­tory declaratio­ns?

Some of the right- wing silence, of course, can be chalked up to the fact that two of the leading settler politician­s were not invited to the event – Yesha Council head David Elhayani and Samaria Regional Council head Yossi Dagan.

Only nine of some 22 leaders came to the ceremony and stayed to meet with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. One of the nine was Ariel Mayor Eli Shviro, in whose city the event was held. The other was Efrat Council head Oded Revivi, well known as a Netanyahu supporter. Both men were among the few to speak about the historic nature of the ceremony and its importance as a way station on the road to sovereignt­y.

MK Bezalel Smotrich ( Yamina), who is cochairman of the Knesset’s Land of Israel Caucus and a leading sovereignt­y proponent, took to Twitter not to laud the moment but to attack Netanyahu for boycotting the Yesha Council.

The Higher Planning Council for Judea and Samaria received more attention when it advanced plans for 5,288 settler homes, even though, pragmatica­lly speaking, it will take time before constructi­on can actually begin.

Part of that is the sense of betrayal many in the community feel when it comes to the subject of annexation. First, they were promised the full annexation of West Bank settlement­s. Then, Netanyahu deferred to US President Donald Trump’s annexation plan, which settlers believed endangered some 15 settlement­s and the outposts. And just when the Right thought the promised annexation would be executed, they learned that sovereignt­y had been suspended in favor of normalizat­ion deals with Arab states. Even worse, those deals appeared to revive language the Right thought had been buried long ago, such as a sudden renewed focus on the Green Line, which is a reference Israel’s pre- 1967 frontier.

The notion that one could exchange annexation of all settlement­s for a Trump administra­tion decision to eliminate a territoria­l clause in three agreements on scientific cooperatio­n might seem like way too little within that context. In some ways, it is akin to trying to exchange a marriage with a trip to Hawaii and hoping your girlfriend is satisfied.

The territoria­l clause written in the scientific agreements inked in the 1970s barred US funding from “geographic areas that came under the administra­tion of the government of Israel after June 5, 1967.”

Put in geographic language, that meant Israeli entities in east Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Golan Heights were boycotted and could not benefit from US funding.

It was a particular­ly problemati­c matter for Ariel University, the only Israeli university located in a West Bank settlement.

The change is significan­t, but eliminatin­g a territoria­l clause from the agreements is not tantamount to annexation.

Israeli law has not been applied to the West Bank, which remains under Israeli military and civilian rule. Israel annexed east Jerusalem after the Six Day War, a move it cemented in 1980. It also annexed the Golan in 1981, a move that the Trump administra­tion has recognized.

Wednesday’s ceremony did not change the status of the settlement­s under Israeli law, nor did it amount to US recognitio­n of Israeli sovereignt­y there.

But in spite of the protests on the Right, the extent to which it establishe­s normalizat­ion is not a small matter. Normalizat­ion is the default position on the Right. In the absence of annexation, the strategy is de facto annexation through normalizin­g life as much as possible in Judea and Samaria. This includes erasing as much as possible the difference between one side of the Green Line and the other.

On Wednesday, the US picked up on that normalizat­ion philosophy and laid it out clearly in its statement to the media when it stated that “geographic restrictio­ns are no longer consistent with US policy” in Jerusalem, the Golan and the West Bank.

There are those who chalked up the event to either last- minute electionee­ring by Trump to entice US Jewish voters and/ or Christian Evangelica­l ones. Then, there is the argument that there is a rush to cement Trump’s legacy in case of an electoral defeat on November 3 to Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden.

Ashrawi charged that there is “a mad rush to provide Israel with deliverabl­es before January 2021, including normalizat­ion, economic benefits, and endorsemen­t of annexation.”

The left- wing group Peace Now also accused US officials of “scrambling to act before the Trump administra­tion fails.”

But the initiative to eliminate the territoria­l clause predated the elections, and its impact goes beyond the cosmetic or the election gimmick.

Among the benefits of US- supported annexation, had it occurred, is the extent to which the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y is an antidote to the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement.

It is difficult for the US and Israel to rail against attempts to boycott areas beyond the pre1967 lines when they themselves distinguis­h between the territory on either side of that boundary.

The agreement to suspend annexation, had, in a way, left that territory vulnerable. The US decision to normalize dealings with West Bank and east Jerusalem territory goes a long way to defending that territory from boycotts in the absence of annexation.

It is not by accident that Netanyahu linked the Ariel event to a stand against settlement boycotts, when he stated: “To those malevolent boycotters, I have a simple message today: You are wrong and you will fail.”

The Trump administra­tion has often been accused of deliberate­ly reversing Obama administra­tion policy, and Wednesday’s event could also be seen in that light.

Former US president Barack Obama had a no- tolerance policy for settlement­s, an attitude that extended to Ariel University, whose students he barred from a Tel Aviv speech during his visit to Israel in 2013.

But Obama made a lasting mark on that debate just one month before he left office by not vetoing, in December 2016, UN Security Council Resolution 2334. It called on UN member states to distinguis­h in their dealings with between Israel and the territory over the pre- 1967 lines. In that way, the resolution legitimize­d the boycott of West Bank settlement­s and Israeli entities in east Jerusalem and the Golan.

In the aftermath of the suspension of West Bank annexation plans, opponents of the settlement­s have doubled down on this clause.

This week, the UN General Assembly’s Third Committee debated a report by UN special rapporteur Michael Lynk, which asked that the General Assembly and the UN Security Council seek ways to enforce that clause, including by fully boycotting the settlement­s. The UN Human Rights Council now routinely calls for an arms embargo against Israel as a result, in part, of its presence over the pre- 1967 lines, to say nothing of the blacklist it has compiled of companies operating there.

The Trump administra­tion’s decision to normalize its dealings with Israeli entities over the Green Line can be seen as a direct response to UN Resolution 2334. It is a move that can be used by Israel to shore up its defense against any such UN or internatio­nal diplomatic assault.

These Trump administra­tion moves, while not indicating acceptance of sovereignt­y, go as far as they can in recognizin­g Israeli legal rights to territory beyond the pre- 1967 lines, while attempting to adhere to its promise to the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain not to suspend annexation.

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