In West Bank, settler leaders complicate annexation plan

Local officials oppose Trump's calls for future Palestinian statehood that would envelop at least 15 settlements, despite U.S. guarantees of protection for and access to the future 'enclaves'

Reuters|
Settler leaders who resist the creation of a Palestinian state are complicating Israel's plans to annex scores of settlements in the West Bank under U.S. President Donald Trump's peace blueprint.
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  • Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's cabinet is due next month to discuss the annexation plan, under which Israel would apply sovereignty over 30% of the West Bank - in areas where most of its about 130 settlements are located.
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    בנימין נתניהו בפגישה עם ראשי מועצת ישע יהודה ושומרון
    בנימין נתניהו בפגישה עם ראשי מועצת ישע יהודה ושומרון
    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meeting with the heads of the Yesha Council of Settlers in the U.S. in January
    (Photo: Yesha Council)
    The plan is opposed by the Palestinians, who seek a state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, with East Jerusalem as its capital. Most world powers agree.
    The plan also faces resistance from settler leaders who oppose Trump's calls for a future Palestinian state that would envelop at least 15 settlements - despite U.S. guarantees of protection for, and access to, the future "enclaves."
    "We're talking about strangling a community," said Hananel Elkayam, mayor of the settlement of Itamar, one of the 15 named in the plan.
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    The West Bank settlement of Itamar
    The West Bank settlement of Itamar
    The West Bank settlement of Itamar
    (Photo: Alex Kolomoisky)
    In misgivings echoed in the other 14, Elkayam predicted residents would be unable to commute to jobs through territory that would be in a new Palestinian state, would by denied construction, and would be at greater risk of attack than now.
    "I would tell (Trump): Thanks very much for the plan, thanks very much for the great affection for the Jewish people (but) we'll set our own destiny," Elkayam said.

    Keeping the door to diplomacy open

    U.S. officials will this week discuss whether to give Israel the green light for annexation moves seen by the Palestinians and many other countries as illegal land-grabs.
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    עבודות בכביש עוקף חווארה בשומרון
    עבודות בכביש עוקף חווארה בשומרון
    West Bank road connecting settlements
    (Photo: Yesha Council)
    Israel's West Bank settlements were built by successive governments on land captured from Jordan in the 1967 Six-Day War. More than 400,000 Israelis now live there, with another 200,000 in East Jerusalem, which was also captured in 1967.
    A Direct Poll survey last week found 56.8% of settlers support the Trump plan, more than the Israeli average.
    Elkayam and other settler leaders say that backing is for annexation - on condition that plans for Palestinian statehood are scrapped.
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    כינוס נגד תוכנית המאה של תנועת נחלה
    כינוס נגד תוכנית המאה של תנועת נחלה
    Rally of settlers opposing Trump peace plan
    (Photo: Eli Mandelbaum)
    Israeli and U.S. officials want to be seen as keeping a door open to diplomacy. Where that door might lead worries Yochai Damri, head of a regional council that includes four of the 15 listed settlements.
    Damri sees Palestinian statehood becoming more likely if the Republican president is defeated by Democrat Joe Biden in November's U.S. election, and if, or when, Netanyahu is succeeded by Benny Gantz, the premier's partner in a fragile unity government.
    The Trump plan says residents of the future enclaves can stay put "unless they choose otherwise."
    Damri and other settlers hear in that a hint that they should quit to make way for Palestinian territorial contiguity.
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