Los Angeles Times

Israel’s West Bank footprint

Nation pledges future controls as it approves first new settlement in two decades.

- By Joshua Mitnick Mitnick is a special correspond­ent.

TEL AVIV — Israel’s move to approve a new settlement deep in the West Bank brought internatio­nal condemnati­on Friday, even as the government was bending to pressure from the Trump administra­tion to limit the footprint of future settlement building.

The decisions drew a furious reaction from Palestinia­ns, who said the move could destroy any chance for peace in the region.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was “disappoint­ed and alarmed” about Israel’s decision to authorize the first new government-approved settlement in more than two decades.

The Israeli security cabinet approved the settlement Thursday, following up on a promise to residents of the illegal outpost of Amona before they were evacuated in February under an order from the Supreme Court. The cabinet also advanced constructi­on tenders from 2,000 new homes and declared 250 acres of the West Bank as state land.

“We promised and we made good on it,” said Ofir Akunis, a lawmaker from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party.

But Netanyahu’s government also said that in response to President Trump’s positions it would limit constructi­on in the more than 100 existing settlement­s to those areas already built.

The decisions allow Netanyahu to give his pro-settlement constituen­ts a victory, while containing ideologues who seek unrestrain­ed settlement growth and annexation, moves which would isolate Israel abroad, said Ofer Zalzberg, an analyst for the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

“The way in which this has both limitation­s and achievemen­ts for the settlers allows Netanyahu to avoid overreach in terms of having Trump serve as the pretext for avoiding annexation,” Zalzberg said, “and at the same time not being labeled as Leftist by the settlers.’’

Meanwhile, Palestinia­n officials in the West Bank said that U.S. acceptance of the new settlement could undermine any attempts by the Trump administra­tion to revive peace negotiatio­ns, which have been moribund in recent years.

“The fact they are coming now and saying they are building a new settlement, is a sign that Netanyahu is very confident, and doesn’t think that there’s anyone abroad who will stop him,” said Xavier Abu Eid, an advisor to the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on’s Negotiatio­ns Affairs Department.

Palestinia­ns and much of the internatio­nal community consider all Israeli building in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem as illegal. The United Nations, the U.S. and European countries have warned that settlement expansion was rapidly endangerin­g prospects for peace through a twostate solution for Israelis and Palestinia­ns.

Guterres “condemns all unilateral actions that, like the present one, threaten peace and undermine the two-state solution,” the U.N. said in statement Friday.

Federica Mogherini, the European Union’s High Representa­tive on Foreign Affairs, said in a statement the decision to establish a new settlement threatens “to further undermine prospects for a two state solution, which remains the only realistic way to fulfill the aspiration­s on both sides.”

During the Obama administra­tion, Israeli settlement building was a point of contention. Trump, who has said Netanyahu should hold off on the expansion of settlement­s, pledged during his campaign to avoid public criticism of Israel.

“All Israeli settlement­s are illegal and we are not going to accept any formula that aims at legitimizi­ng the presence of Israeli colonies on occupied Palestinia­n land,’’ Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinia­n negotiator, said in a statement.

“Israel enjoys a culture of impunity that allows it to strengthen its apartheid regime in Occupied Palestine,” Erekat said. “We send a clear message to the U.S. Administra­tion, the United Nations and to the European Union: Peace is not going to be achieved by tolerating such crimes.”

The new settlement — to be called “Geulat Zion” — is planned for an empty hilltop about two miles east of Shilo, a remote Israeli settlement deep in the West Bank.

Israel’s Peace Now organizati­on — an opponent of settlement expansion — said it’s the first time since 1991 that Israel’s government has decided to establish a settlement in such a far-flung spot.

In a statement, Peace Now said the new settlement would be “strategic for the fragmentat­ion of the West Bank” because it would join a series of Israeli towns that effectivel­y would prevent the establishm­ent of a contiguous Palestinia­n state.

The group alleged that Netanyahu’s new policy of settlement restraint contained loopholes that could enable the government to continue building .

Israel and the Trump administra­tion have been negotiatin­g a joint approach to West Bank settlement­s, with Trump’s negotiatio­ns envoy, Jason Greenblatt, and Netanyahu devoting two March meetings to settlement­s. Greenblatt also met with Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas twice in March to discuss the peace process.

Following the settlement announceme­nt, a White House statement said that “further unrestrain­ed settlement activity does not help advance peace’’ but expressed understand­ing that the new settlement was part of a commitment made to Amona evacuees before Trump called for restraint.

“The Israeli government has made clear that Israel’s intent is to adopt a policy regarding settlement activity that takes President Trump’s concerns into considerat­ion,’’ the statement said.

Settler leaders hailed Israel’s decision to establish a new settlement, but expressed concern that the government had not set a timetable for the beginning of constructi­on.

Betzalel Smotrich, a legislator from the pro-settler Jewish Home party, tweeted the decision represente­d a “breakthrou­gh” but also cautioned that the restraints on building amount to a “freeze.”

 ?? Oded Balilty Associated Press ?? THE ISRAELI CABINET advanced constructi­on tenders from 2,000 new homes and declared 250 acres of the West Bank as state land.
Oded Balilty Associated Press THE ISRAELI CABINET advanced constructi­on tenders from 2,000 new homes and declared 250 acres of the West Bank as state land.

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