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Home / World

Q&A: Israel appears undeterred by international opposition to annexation plan

By Josef Federman analysis
Other·
1 Jul, 2020 01:01 AM7 mins to read

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Palestinians labourers line up to cross a checkpoint at the entrance to the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim, near Jerusalem. Photos / AP

Palestinians labourers line up to cross a checkpoint at the entrance to the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim, near Jerusalem. Photos / AP

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has signalled a delay to his pledge to begin annexing parts of the occupied West Bank.

Netanyahu said today that discussions with the United States on his plan would continue "in the coming days".

His vision of redrawing the map of the Holy Land, in line with US President Donald Trump's Mideast plan, has been welcomed by Israel's religious and nationalist right wing and condemned by the Palestinians and the international community.

Netanyahu made the comments shortly after wrapping up talks with White House envoy Avi Berkowitz and the US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman.

The sides have been holding talks for several months on finalising a map spelling out which areas of the West Bank will be annexed by Israel. "I spoke about the question of sovereignty, which we are working on these days and we will continue to work on in the coming days," Netanyahu said.

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US #Jews wary of what may happen if #Israel goes ahead with plan to #annex West Bank while keeping the #Palestinian issue unresolved.https://t.co/F3YRC2macE

— The Jerusalem Post (@Jerusalem_Post) July 1, 2020

In an unsourced report, Israel's public broadcaster Kan published a graphic today showing what it said was proposed Israeli modifications to the initial annexation map proposed by Trump.

The map calls for turning over additional West Bank territory allocated to the Palestinians, specifically land surrounding settlements and highways that is marked in green. In return, it proposes "compensating" the Palestinians with territory, marked in yellow, the Trump proposal had allocated to Israel.

Israel's Channel 12 TV reported that the American negotiators are asking Israel to make "a significant step" as a gesture to the Palestinians, such as handing over West Bank territory to Palestinian control comparable to that annexed. Israel currently has full control over 60 per cent of the West Bank. That report also was unsourced.

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An Israeli soldier stands guard at the Tapuach junction next to the West Bank city of Nablus.
An Israeli soldier stands guard at the Tapuach junction next to the West Bank city of Nablus.

Here's a closer look at annexation:

WHY ANNEXATION, AND WHY NOW?

Israel's right wing has long favoured annexing parts or all of the West Bank, saying the territory is vital for the country's security and an inseparable part of the biblical Land of Israel.

But most of the world considers the West Bank, captured by Israel from Jordan in the 1967 Mideast war, to be occupied territory, and Israel's dozens of settlements, now home to nearly 500,000 Jewish Israelis, as illegal.

Surrounded by a team of settler allies, Trump has upended US policy, recognising contested Jerusalem as Israel's capital, moving the US Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, recognising Israel's 1981 annexation of the Golan Heights and announcing that Jewish settlements are not illegal.

The decades-old status quo in the West Bank is about to change, as Israel prepares to annex some of the land it has occupied since 1967. With international concern mounting, how far will Benjamin Netanyahu go? My report https://t.co/xr9QILfDzn

— Mark MacKinnon (@markmackinnon) June 30, 2020

Seeking to court hardline voters on the campaign trail, Netanyahu last year began talking about annexation. After Trump released his Mideast plan in January envisioning permanent Israeli control over 30 per cent of the West Bank, including all of Israel's settlements and the strategic Jordan Valley region, Netanyahu quickly jumped on board.

Israel and the US have formed a joint committee to map out precisely which areas Israel can keep.

Netanyahu made sure that under the coalition agreement, he can bring a proposal to the new government anytime after tomorrow. He appears eager to move forward before the November presidential election, possibly with a limited move billed as a first stage, especially with Trump's re-election prospects in question.

Palestinian farmers ride on a truck loaded with eggplants near the West Bank city of Jericho in the Jordan Valley.
Palestinian farmers ride on a truck loaded with eggplants near the West Bank city of Jericho in the Jordan Valley.

WHY IS THERE SO MUCH OPPOSITION?

The Palestinians seek the entire West Bank as the heartland of a future independent state and believe the Trump plan would deliver a fatal blow to their fading hopes of statehood.

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Among the plan's components: The Palestinians would only have limited autonomy in a fraction of territory they seek. Isolated Israeli settlements deep inside Palestinian territory would remain intact, and the Israeli military would retain overall security control over the Palestinian entity.

The international community has invested billions of dollars in promoting a two-state solution since the interim Oslo peace accords of the 1990s. The US secretary-general, the European Union and leading Arab countries have all said that any Israeli annexation would violate international law and greatly undermine the prospects for Palestinian independence.

The Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim, in the West Bank.
The Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim, in the West Bank.

WILL ANYTHING CHANGE ON THE GROUND?

Not immediately. Israel has controlled the entire West Bank for more than 50 years.

Palestinians will remain in their towns and villages, while Israelis will live in their newly annexed settlements. The Palestinian Authority is protesting against annexation but has ruled out any kind of violent response.

But over time, there is a larger risk of conflict.

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Netanyahu has said he opposes granting citizenship to Palestinians living on annexed lands, presumably because it would undercut Israel's Jewish majority. But failing to grant equal rights to Palestinians in annexed areas opens Israel up to charges of establishing an apartheid system that would draw heavy international condemnation.

"There is no special relationship where US funding should be used to further human rights abuses and violations of international law"

- Pramila Jayapalhttps://t.co/65xbZTLkk7

— Middle East Eye (@MiddleEastEye) June 30, 2020

Palestinians who are not living on annexed lands could face other challenges. Moving between Palestinian population centres — or even reaching their own properties and farmlands — could become difficult if they have to cross through Israeli territory. Critics say that Israel could also use its sovereignty to expropriate Palestinian lands.

The Palestinian Authority has already cut off its ties with Israel to protest against the looming annexation. In the absence of any peace prospects, the Palestinian Authority could see its international funding dry up or decide to close.

The collapse of the authority could force Israel, as an occupying power, to pick up the tab for governing the Palestinians. In the long term, it could lead to Palestinian and international calls to establish a single binational state with voting rights for all — a scenario that could spell the end of Israel as a Jewish-majority state.

Camels walk near the West Bank village of Al Fasayil, in the Jordan Valley.
Camels walk near the West Bank village of Al Fasayil, in the Jordan Valley.

WHY DOESN'T THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY STOP THIS?

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has said annexation would mark a "most serious violation of international law." The EU's foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, has warned of "significant consequences."

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Jordan and Egypt, the only Arab states at peace with Israel, have condemned the annexation plan. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, powerful Arab players with informal relations with Israel, have said warming ties will be in danger.

Israel and the US appear to be banking on the international community's poor record of translating rhetoric into concrete action. Days after the UAE warned Israel against annexation, for instance, two Emirati companies reached cooperation deals with Israeli partners in the fight against the coronavirus.

Thanks to the US veto over UN Security Council decisions, international sanctions appear to be out of the question. Divisions within the EU make concerted European reaction unlikely as well.

Individual countries might seek to impose limited sanctions against Israel, and the International Criminal Court in the Hague could take annexation into account as it weighs whether to launch a war crimes investigation into Israeli policies.

A Palestinian shepherd herds his flock next to the West Bank Jewish Settlement of Tomer in the Jordan Valley.
A Palestinian shepherd herds his flock next to the West Bank Jewish Settlement of Tomer in the Jordan Valley.

CAN ANYTHING STOP ANNEXATION?

The biggest obstacle to Netanyahu appears to be from within. US officials say they are unlikely to allow Israel to move forward unless Netanyahu and his coalition partner, Defence Minister Benny Gantz, are in agreement.

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Gantz, a former military chief and bitter rival of Netanyahu, has said Israel should move carefully and in coordination with regional partners.

Gantz laid the groundwork for further delays yesterday when he said his top priority is guiding the country through the coronavirus crisis.

"Anything unrelated to the battle against the coronavirus will wait," he said.

Ironically, some hard-line settler leaders have also opposed the plan, saying they cannot accept any programme that envisions a Palestinian state.

If the issue remains frozen, time could run out on Netanyahu.

The presumptive Democratic nominee, former Vice-President Joe Biden, has said he opposes annexation. A Biden victory in November could mean that any Israeli annexation will be short-lived.

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- AP

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