With Middle East
peace talks frozen and expectations of a negotiated deal at an all-time
low, a growing number of Israeli politicians believe it is time for the
government to set the nation's own borders unilaterally. Some seek the
annexation of most of the occupied West Bank, others say only the big
Jewish settlement blocs should be brought under Israeli sovereignty,
while a third group calls for a partial pullout to create a de facto
Palestinian state. Such
actions would break the dynamics of the U.S.-driven peace process, which
has been bogged down by years of failure and recrimination. By the same
token, it would likely unleash a firestorm of protest at home and
abroad. "I think an era has ended and a new era has begun," said Economy
Minister Naftali Bennett, a hawkish, hi-tech tycoon and head of the
nationalist Jewish Home party, which has always opposed negotiations
with the Palestinians. Bennett
said Palestinians should be given "autonomy on steroids" in areas of
the West Bank where they already exert some control, while the remaining
62 percent of the territory should be gradually annexed to Israel. "I know this is not as sexy as the perfect two-state solution, but this is realistic," he said on Sunday. Many
Israelis would question how realistic it would be to orchestrate such a
massive land-grab in the face of almost certain ferocious world
condemnation, and Bennett himself recognized that his policy push was
not yet mainstream. But support for some form of unilateral annexation does appear to be gaining traction amongst right-wingers. RISING STAR Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas wants to create an independent state in the
West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip - land Israel captured in the 1967 war. The
latest round of talks aimed at creating a fully sovereign Palestine hit
the rocks last week, with Washington blaming both sides for failing to
compromise. What happens next remains uncertain. Israel
annexed East Jerusalem more than 30 years ago, in a move not
internationally recognized. It pulled its forces from Gaza in 2005, but
still maintains direct control of the bulk of the West Bank, known as
Area C, while allowing the Palestinians varying degrees of self-rule
over the rest - Areas A and B. The Jewish settlements that pepper the West Bank and that are home to some 350,000 Israelis are all in Area C. "I
am recommending that preparations begin to annex Area C lands, those
places in which, in any event, a Jewish population lives," Civil Defence
Minister Gilad Erdan, who is also a member of the powerful security
cabinet, told Army Radio on Sunday. Erdan
is close to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and is seen as a rising
star in the ruling Likud Party. The vast majority of Likud lawmakers
have never endorsed the two-state solution, and instead warmly embrace
the settlement movement. "We
can begin to prepare to annex if we don't have a Palestinian partner
and if the situation does not appear to change," Erdan said, suggesting
that such a move would cover some four percent of West Bank land. Palestinians
accuse Israelis of sabotaging the nine-month talks, arguing that
settlement expansion, announced even as the negotiations were being
held, undermined the whole process. Peace
Now, an Israeli group that monitors and opposes settlement activity,
said in a report issued on Tuesday that during the nine-month
negotiating period, Israel finalized plans for the construction of 4,868 settler homes. Annexation of any part of the West Bank would unleash a furious Palestinian response. Netanyahu
has not spoken about the issue, but he would come under heavy pressure
from allies to act decisively if the Palestinians carried through on a
threat to join a battery of international bodies from which they could
lambast Israel and pursue their statehood goals. However,
political analysts doubted whether Netanyahu would want to head down
the path of annexation, knowing that it could turn him into a pariah on
the world stage. "I don't
see him annexing territory, because that is against international law.
If you want to take unilateral steps, you have to do things in a wiser fashion," said Uri Dromi, who was a spokesman for former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. Rabin
was assassinated in 1995 by an ultra-nationalist Jew opposed to an
interim peace deal he had negotiated with the Palestinians, which gave
them limited self-rule in the West Bank and Gaza. "We
should say that the big settlements will stay and we will keep on
building in them, and the little ones will go. But don't annex anything,
keep the door open for the Palestinians to come to the table and work
out a land swap," Dromi said. JEWISH STATE Without
a formal peace treaty, diplomats have warned that continued settlement
building will soon prevent the Palestinians from having a viable,
contiguous state. If that happens, they say, Israel and Palestine might
then morph into a single state. Finance
Minister Yair Lapid, the head of Israel's second largest party, Yesh
Atid, says this must never occur, cautioning that it would mark the
death of Israel as a Jewish State. "My
father did not come from a ghetto to live in a Judeo-Arab state. He
came to live in a Jewish state. Since there is no way to absorb four
million Palestinians, we need to separate from them," he said recently,
without elaborating. However,
a senior official from Lapid's party, who declined to be named, said
that if the talks are officially declared dead, Yesh Atid might push for
a unilateral demarcation of a Palestinian state enabling Israel to keep
the major settlements. This
would leave many of the core issues of the conflict unresolved - such
as the fate of Palestinian refugees who still live in squalid camps
around the Arab world - and would be rejected out of hand by
Palestinians as an illegal imposition. But
even some of the more moderate Israeli voices who have been closely
involved with peace-making efforts over the past two decades, believe
the time is approaching for a rethink. "Given
the fact we have been trying for over 20 years and failed, we should
think about different paradigms," said an Israeli official knowledgeable
about the latest talks, but who declined to give his name because of
the sensitive subject. Saying
the time might have come for unilateral measures, the official added:
"If we can't reach a deal with (the Palestinians) maybe we should shape
our destiny in our own hands rather than hand them a veto power over our
future."
Israeli politicians seek to bypass talks, set own boundaries
Reuters
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