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The issue of Israeli settlements has moved to the front burner.
Diplomatic discussion at this time is focusing on the proposal that
Jordan and Egypt put forward in April to end the current crisis and form
the basis for new negotiations. (See www.cmep.org
to read the Jordanian-Egyptian
proposal)
This initiative calls for a "total and immediate freeze of all
settlement activities including those in East Jerusalem." U.S.
Secretary of State Colin Powell, in a May 2 meeting with Israeli Foreign
Minister Shimon Peres, raised the issue of the settlements and made
clear that Washington is opposed to all settlement activity, both new
and old.
The Bush Administration would undoubtedly meet strong resistance if
it chose to back up its words of opposition with meaningful pressure on
the Government of Israel to stop all settlement activity. The
Administration needs encouragement from citizens. Members of Congress,
heavily influenced by the pro-Israel lobby, need to know that their
constituents demand an end to Israel's provocative policy, which has so
damaged peace making efforts.
The unwillingness of the Clinton Administration to challenge Israel's
settlement expansion during Ehud Barak's tenure as prime minister of
Israel is considered a primary reason for the failure of U.S. efforts to
lead Israel and the Palestinians to the final status agreement
envisioned in the Oslo peace plan. Israel disagreed that settlement
activity was included in the Oslo agreement's ban of unilateral acts to
change ‘facts-on-the-ground,' and pushed ahead with settlements.
Looking back to his experience in 1978 in negotiating the terms of
peace between Israel and Egypt, former President Jimmy Carter wrote last
November that "an underlying reason that years of U.S. diplomacy
have failed and violence in the Middle East persists is that some
Israeli leaders continue to ‘create facts' by building settlements in
occupied territory." Carter, along with former presidents Ford and
Nixon, termed the settlements illegal under the Geneva Convention, which
forbids a country to transfer "parts of its civilian population
into the territory it occupies." Succeeding Administrations refused
to use the word illegal, and referred to settlements as an obstacle to
peace
SETTLEMENTS' CHAMPION
Israel's Prime Minister Ariel Sharon was an architect of the
settlement policy and the strategy, which has sought to prevent the
creation of a territorially viable Palestinian entity by moving Israelis
into the occupied territories of Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
The settlements and their network of exclusive roads cut the West Bank
into Swiss cheese, and form a barrier between East Jerusalem and the
Palestinian population of the West Bank.
As Palestinians watched settlements grow, many became convinced that
the prolonged negotiations were leading not to peace but to the
permanent loss of more of their land. Their despair became the tinder
set aflame by Sharon last September 28 when the Al Aqsa intifadeh began.
Sharon has not only declared that none of the Israeli settlements
will be dismantled, his government has announced plans for an additional
700 homes in two West Bank settlements and 3,000 new apartments in Har
Homa on occupied land annexed to Jerusalem. The growth of Har Homa is
planned even though 76% of the 2,200 units offered in 1999-2000 remain
unsold.
The Los Angeles Times, on May 1, reports that 5,000 more apartments
are said to be planned for the settlements south of Bethlehem. The
official Israel policy is that no new settlements will be built and that
all new settlement activity would only be in response to "natural
growth needs." However, Peace Now, the Israeli group that monitors
settlement activity, issued a study on April 16 which reveals that most
of the thousands of housing units built in two large West Bank
settlements over the past six years remain unsold and empty. Peace Now's
director says that "natural growth" is a fiction designed to
camouflage politically motivated expansion.
The Mitchell Committee, an international fact-finding body headed by
former U.S. Senator George Mitchell, was established to look into the
outbreak of violence. Prominent in their recommendations was a call for
a freeze on settlements. Prime Minister Sharon responded to the
Committee's call for a freeze by leaking news that he will propose an
increase in state support for the settlements by $362,000,000.
Ha'aretz, an Israeli newspaper, called the Committee's report "a
series of intelligent recommendations of ways for restoring calm,"
and criticized the planned increase in settlement funding as "a
slap in the face" to "world public opinion and America's
expectations." (See www.cmep.org
to read the Mitchell report) [Within
days, as reported by Israel Radio, "Prime Minister Sharon decided
to significantly cut back the additional funds...to the
settlements." And Reuters reports that with the new budget, Sharon
was "moving to ease tension with the United States."]
SOURCE OF VIOLENCE
The settlements are not only illegal and an impediment to peace, but
are a primary factor in the daily violence raging between Palestinians
and Israelis. Palestinian gunmen have most consistently targeted
settlements. Israeli forces respond with antitank missiles, fired by
helicopter gunships and from the ground, into Palestinian locales. Most
of the 80 Israeli Jews slain in the violence have been settlers or
soldiers assigned for their protection.
Forward, an American-Jewish weekly, wrote in the May 11 edition:
"The dilemma for Israel's boosters is partly political. Publicizing
the degree to which the violence has been concentrated in the
territories could appear to reinforce claims...that the Intifadeh is
directed against Israel's presence in the territories and not against
Israel as such. Government officials reject that contention, insisting
that the Palestinians true target is Israel itself and pro-government
spokesmen have sought for months to emphasize that the danger is to
Israel as a whole, not just the settlers."
In Hebron about 400 settlers live in the heart of the ancient city
among the city's 120,000 Palestinians. Most of the city is under
Palestinian Authority control, but the Jewish enclaves and their nearby
neighborhoods - home to 20,000 Palestinians – remain under Israeli
control. In late March about 100 settlers battled Israeli police with
iron bars after the police tried to stop them from vandalizing
Palestinian homes. The next week six Israeli policemen were hurt as a
result of settlers detonating a liquid propane tank in a Palestinian
shop. There are about 196,000 settlers in 146 settlements in the West
Bank; with 2 million Palestinians living in 650 towns. (See www.FMEP.org
for reports on Israeli settlement by the Foundation for Middle East
Peace.)
The Christian village of Beit Jala lies next to Bethlehem on a hill
facing Gilo, a huge settlement built by Israel on land it conquered in
1967 and annexed to Jerusalem. The beautiful stone houses that are
nearest Gilo are vacant with huge holes in their walls and with floors
littered with shell casings "made in the USA." Israeli forces
use what has been condemned as disproportionate use of force to respond
to shots fired toward Gilo by Palestinian gunmen from the outskirts of
Beit Jala. In Beit Jala on May 6 Israeli tank shells and gunfire killed
a Palestinian fighter and wounded 20 Palestinians, including a
five-year-old boy. Settlements in the occupied parts of Jerusalem house
about 180,000 Israelis.
The Gaza Strip, where 6,500 Israeli settlers live in 16 settlements
and about 1 million Palestinians live in 40 towns, has been subject to
some of the worst settlement-related violence. Despite the perception
that Gaza was returned to the Palestinians, Israel has total control
over 20% of Gaza, including 42% of the valuable beach property. As a
security measure to protect settlers' cars from stones and gunfire, a
wide swath of land on both sides of the roads leading to the settlements
has been cleared of Palestinian olive and citrus orchards, as well as
homes.
FUTURE OF THE SETTLEMENTS
During the final status negotiations at Camp David last summer,
Israel proposed annexing large settlement clusters in exchange for a
land swap and the evacuation of small isolated settlements. Israeli
newspapers, reporting last December, said that Israel had agreed to
transfer to the Palestinians all the evacuated settlements in their
entirety in the framework of the proposed permanent agreement. A plan
drafted by the World Bank envisions selling the settlers' homes, fields
and public buildings to Palestinian Authority residents, with Israel
being credited toward future rehabilitation costs related to Palestinian
refugees, in return for roads and infrastructure that would remain on
the land.
Israeli leftists are urging the government to immediately evacuate
the isolated settlements and assist the settlers who want to leave.
David Grossman, an Israeli writing in the November 8 New York Times,
says, "Common sense tells us that we cannot defend the settlements,
and that they endanger the fragile prospects for peace. They will have
to be dismantled."
Palestinian leader Faisel Husseini, in a May 3 press conference in
Washington DC, explained the Palestinian insistence that a permanent
peace agreement establish the Israel-Palestine border as that of June 6,
1967. He argues that if the border lacked the international legitimacy
of UNSC Resolution 242, which calls for Israeli withdrawal from that
land it occupied in 1967, it would continue to be subject to dispute and
would place an agreement at risk. "Then we are ready to negotiate
adjustments," said Husseini, implying a willingness to agree to
Israel's annexation of some settlement blocks in exchange for Israeli
land being turned over to Palestine. Husseini further objected both to
the poor quality of the desert lands offered by Israel as a land swap,
and to the inequality of Israel determining not only what Palestinian
land it will keep, but also what land it will swap. And in Jerusalem,
envisioned as an open city and capital of both countries, Husseini
suggests that in return for Israel maintaining sovereignty over
settlements in East Jerusalem, Palestinian neighborhoods be built in
West Jerusalem.
While the proposals and discussions on final status issues that took
place in December and January won't be the starting place for
negotiations when they resume, collective memory will keep them on the
table. Israeli security expert Joseph Alpher concurs with the consensus
that a lack of trust dominates and there's a long way to go before a
peace agreement can be expected, and there will be additional dangers if
the current situation festers. Alpher sees the Jordan-Egyptian proposal
as the way to begin and urged the Bush Administration to "sign onto
this initiative in a forceful way."
ACTION NEEDED:
Contact the Secretary of State and your members of Congress, making
these points in your communication:
1. Ask that the United States support initiatives to restart
Israeli-Palestinian negotiations and end the tragic cycle of violence.
Urge policymakers to cooperate with the peace proposal put forward by
Jordan and Egypt.
2. Express appreciation for the work of former senators George
Mitchell and Warren Rudman on the committee established at Sharm
el-Sheik and urge the U.S. to support the recommendations made by the
committee.
3. Note that both the Jordanian-Egyptian peace proposal and the
Mitchell Committee report call for Israel to freeze all settlement
activity including "natural growth."
4. Quote former President Jimmy Carter, in an op-ed published in late
November 2000, "An underlying reason that years of U.S. diplomacy
have failed and violence in the Middle East persists is that some
Israeli leaders continue to ‘create facts' by building settlements in
occupied territory." The Clinton Administration's silence as Israel
continuously expanded settlements during the Oslo peace process was a
mistake.
5. Ask that financial pressure be applied as it was in 1992 during
the presidency of George Bush if the Israeli government is not
responsive to appeals from the United States to immediately freeze
settlement activity, including in East Jerusalem.
6. Express alarm at the April letter of Congress to the President
blaming of the Palestinians for the collapse of the peace process and
for "embarking on a campaign of violence." Ask members of
Congress to support the Jordanian-Egyptian Proposal and to insist that
Israel freeze all settlement activity as called for in that Proposal and
in the Mitchell Committee report as well.
CONTACT:
The Honorable Colin Powell
Secretary of State
U.S. Department of State
Washington, D.C. 20520
202-647-6575 comments line Secretary@state.gov
Dear Mr. Secretary:
The Honorable (First name, Last name )
United States Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510
Dear Senator (Last name):
The Honorable (First name, Last name)
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20515
Dear Representative (Last name):
U.S. Capitol Switchboard will connect you to any office:
202-224-3121
To find information on Members of Congress and to send comments to
Members' Web sites, go to:
www.senate.gov
and
www.house.gov
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