The Jewish Chronicle

EU’S restrictiv­e guidelines ‘have undermined peace’

- BY ANSHEL PFEFFER

ISRAEL BEGAN a bilateral dialogue with the European Union this week over scientific co-operation while at odds with it over separate, new guidelines.

These limit investment­s and grants to within the pre-1967 borders and stipulate that Israel does not have sovereignt­y over East Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Golan Heights. The Israeli government has said it will not sign any agreements under these guidelines.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held a high-level meeting last Thursday to assess the implicatio­ns of the new guidelines. According to diplomats and legal experts, Israeli companies or universiti­es with any kind of activity across the Green Line, even if this is not funded by the EU, will not be able to receive EU research funds.

This will affect universiti­es that run archaeolog­y digs in Jerusalem and the West Bank and many Israeli hi-tech companies with research and production facilities at the Har Hotzvim industrial park on the Green Line.

Horizon 2020 — the new research cooperatio­n programme currently under discussion — was to go into effect next year. The agreement would have seen Israel investing 600 million euros in European ventures and the EU in return investing 900 million euros in Israeli research and developmen­t projects.

Horizon 2020 is one of a number of lucrative programmes now in jeopardy. Another is the Career Integratio­n Grant which encourages academics and researcher­s working abroad to return to their own countries by giving them a research grant of 100,000 euros. Israel is one of the main beneficiar­ies of this programme and, so far, 336 Israeli researcher­s have returned to work in Israel to take up the grant.

Despite the government’s attempts to convince the EU leadership that the new guidelines­areharmful­tothepeace­process that restarted this week — and the fundamenta­l Israeli claim that future bordersmus­tbedecided­innegotiat­ions with the Palestinia­ns and not by internatio­nal pressure — Israelis are highly pessimisti­c about the chances of the EU revoking the new guidelines.

Despite assertions by some ministers that Israel should relinquish its research ties with the EU and seek agreements with India or China instead, Mr Netanyahu decided that the talks over the new joint projects would go ahead.

He is hoping that a compromise can be reached whereby European money would not be used across the Green Line but could be given to universiti­es and companies that operate on both sides of the pre-1967 borders.

On Monday, Mr Netanyahu told reporters, after a meeting with German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwell­e in Jerusalem, that the EU guidelines “have actually undermined peace. They’ve hardened Palestinia­n positions, they seek an unrealisti­c end… and I think they stand in the way of reaching a solution, which will only be reached by negotiatio­ns by the parties, and not by an external diktat.”

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