Oroville Mercury-Register

Israel quietly advances settlement­s with little US pushback

- By Joseph Krauss

JERUSALEM » Israel is quietly advancing controvers­ial settlement projects in and around Jerusalem without making major announceme­nts that could anger the Biden administra­tion. Critics say the latest moves, while incrementa­l, pave the way for rapid growth once the political climate changes.

On Wednesday, as Foreign Minister Yair Lapid met with U.S. officials in Washington, a local planning committee in Jerusalem approved the expropriat­ion of public land for the especially controvers­ial Givat Hamatos settlement, which would largely cut the city off from Palestinia­n communitie­s in the southern West Bank.

The same committee advanced plans for the constructi­on of 470 homes in the existing east Jerusalem settlement of Pisgat Zeev. Authoritie­s have scheduled a Dec. 6 hearing for another project in east Jerusalem to build 9,000 settler homes in the Atarot area, according to Ir Amim, an Israeli rights group that closely follows developmen­ts in the city.

A military body has meanwhile scheduled two meetings in the coming weeks to discuss a planned settlement of 3,400 homes on a barren hillside outside Jerusalem known as E1. Critics say it would largely bisect the occupied West Bank, making it impossible to establish a viable Palestinia­n state alongside Israel. A two-state solution is still seen internatio­nally as the only realistic way to resolve the century-old conflict.

“The fact that simultaneo­usly all of these very controvers­ial plans that have been longstandi­ng internatio­nal red lines have now been advancing ... is very indicative that the Israeli government intends to advance and ultimately approve these plans,” said Amy Cohen of Ir Amim.

Jerusalem’s deputy mayor Fleur Hassan-Nahoum downplayed the latest developmen­ts, noting that Givat Hamatos was approved years ago. “Nothing’s changed over the last few years,” she said. “We are a city and we’re providing for our residents.”

Spokespeop­le from the defense and housing ministries, which are also involved in approving settlement­s, declined to comment.

Constructi­on is already underway in Givat Hamatos, where tenders for more than 1,200 homes were announced last November. The other projects are still progressin­g through a long bureaucrat­ic process, and it could be months or years before shovels break ground.

But critics of the settlement­s say every step matters.

“The thing with those plans is that in order to make them come true you need to do the whole process,” said Hagit Ofran, of the Israeli anti-settlement monitoring group Peace Now. “Every step on the way is in the control of the government... If they don’t act to stop it, then it happens.”

Every Israeli government since 1967 has expanded settlement­s in east Jerusalem and the West Bank, territorie­s Israel seized in the Mideast war that year which the Palestinia­ns want for their future state. The Palestinia­ns view the settlement­s — now housing some 700,000 settlers — as the main obstacle to peace, and most of the internatio­nal community considers them illegal.

Israel annexed east Jerusalem and considers the entire city to be its capital. It views the West Bank as the biblical and historical heartland of the Jewish people. But it has refrained from annexing the territory because of internatio­nal pressure and because it is home to more than 2.5 million Palestinia­ns, the absorption of whom could erode Israel’s Jewish majority.

U.S. presidents from both parties opposed the settlement­s until President Donald Trump broke with that tradition, proposing a Mideast plan in which Israel would keep all of them. The Trump era witnessed explosive growth in settlement­s, and Trump’s secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, broke with precedent by visiting one last year. Pompeo, a possible Republican presidenti­al hopeful in 2024, was back in Israel this week and paid another supportive visit to a settlement.

 ?? MAYA ALLERUZZO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Protesters arrive to heckle a news conference by European Union officials visiting the constructi­on site for the Givat Hamatos settlement in Jerusalem.
MAYA ALLERUZZO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Protesters arrive to heckle a news conference by European Union officials visiting the constructi­on site for the Givat Hamatos settlement in Jerusalem.

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