"A Greater Israel? Faction says no to two-state solution, yes to annexing Palestinian areas," By Booth and Eglash, Washington Post, 11/6/2013
Wednesday, November 06, 2013 9:23 AM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/israeli-right-says-no-to-two-states-yes-to-greater-israel/2013/11/05/aa9068ee-454d-11e3-95a9-3f15b5618ba8_story.html
A Greater Israel? Faction says no to two-state solution, yes to annexing Palestinian areas
By William
Booth and Ruth Eglash, Washington Post, Wednesday, November 6, 4:58 AM
JERUSALEM — As Secretary
of State John F. Kerry resumes talks here Wednesday in the quest to
create “two states for two people,” a vocal faction in Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is, more openly than ever,
opposing the very idea of a Palestinian state —
and putting forward its own plans to take, rather than give away,
territory.
Ministers
in Netanyahu’s ruling coalition and leaders of his party, the Likud,
are in revolt against the international community’s long-held consensus
that
there should be two states between the Jordan River and the
Mediterranean Sea. In the process, they are seeking to overturn the
commitments of every U.S. president since Bill Clinton and at least four
Israeli prime ministers, including the current one.
While
once content to simply voice their opposition to giving up what they
see as Jewish land or rights in the West Bank, these two-state opponents
have gone
beyond shouting “no” and are preparing details of their own vision for
how Israel should proceed unilaterally after the current round of peace talks fails — which they say is inevitable.
“The
day after peace talks fail, we need to have Plan B,” said Knesset
member Tzipi Hotovely, a rising star in the Likud party and deputy
minister of transportation
in Netanyahu’s government.
Instead
of a sovereign Palestinian nation arising in the West Bank and Gaza,
with East Jerusalem as its capital — which has been the focus of
on-again, off-again
peace negotiations since the Oslo Accords in 1993 — the two-state
opponents envision Israel annexing large swaths of the West Bank.
As
for the Gaza Strip and its 1.6 million inhabitants, which Palestinians
consider central to any future nation, the Israeli expansionists say
Gaza should be
abandoned to its own fate — to be eventually absorbed by Egypt or left
as a hostile semi-state, run by the
Islamist militant organization Hamas and isolated from Israel by existing separation barriers.
As
for the Palestinians living in the West Bank, depending on the ideas
under discussion, the annexationists suggest that they be offered
Israeli citizenship
or residency or be made the responsibility of Jordan.
“I
think we should no longer think of Jewish settlements in the West Bank,
but Palestinian settlements in Israel,” Danny Danon, deputy defense
minister, said
in an interview.
Danon,
recently elected to head the central committee of the Likud party,
imagines an archipelago of Palestinian cities — Jenin, Nablus, Ramallah
and Hebron
— as Arab islands in an Israeli sea.
“The
Jewish people are not settlers in the West Bank, but Israel will make
the Palestinians settlers and Jordan will be the one taking control over
Palestinians
and that’s it,” Danon told Israel’s Channel 1 this summer.
Beyond the fringe
After years of criticism, Netanyahu declared himself an
advocate for two states in a speech at Bar Ilan University in 2009.
He repeated his commitment to the idea last month — as long as Israel’s
security demands are met and the Palestinians recognize Israel as a
Jewish state.
But
opponents and skeptics of the two-state solution represent a formidable
bloc in the Israeli government and parliament. Those who would
unilaterally annex
all or part of the West Bank comprise a smaller but still-potent
number.
Though
they are sometimes depicted as a right-wing fringe by their critics in
the peace camp, there is considerable support for their ideas. An April
survey
of Jewish Israelis for Ariel University, which is in a Jewish settlement
in the West Bank, found that 35 percent said the government should
annex all the land of Judea and Samaria — the biblical names some
Israelis use to describe the West Bank.
About
a quarter of those polled said only the areas containing large Jewish
settlements should be annexed. These areas represent about 6 percent of
West Bank
territory, and the idea that Israel would keep them and swap other land
to a new Palestinian state is a mainstream view that is at the center of
Kerry’s peace initiative.
Palestinian
leaders and members of their negotiating team say the ideas put forth
by the annexationists reveal Israel’s true heart. Israeli leaders, they
say,
do not really want a deal and instead want to keep the land they won
from Jordan in the 1967 war and have occupied since — land that Israelis
want for security and because they believe that it is their ancestral
home.
Of
course, the Palestinians have their own expansionists who would like to
take all of the land between the Mediterranean and the Jordan River.
Hamas does not
recognize Israel’s right to exist and has for decades waged a campaign
of violence against Israeli military and civilian targets. In academic
and activist circles, there is also support for a binational solution
among Palestinians who have grown frustrated
with a long-delayed peace process.
Many
Israeli leaders who support the two-state solution acknowledge that
they are tired of failure and cynical about prospects for a
U.S.-brokered deal. But
they say the idea of annexing the West Bank is not only unrealistic but
also incendiary.
“The
fact that the right wing is thinking about solutions without the two
states worries me,” said Hilik Bar, deputy speaker of the Israeli
parliament and a
member of the Labor Party.
He
said that as painful as it will be to surrender most of the West Bank
for a Palestinian state, it is necessary to end the conflict and to keep
Israel both
Jewish and democratic.
If
all of the Palestinians in the West Bank became Israeli citizens, they
would wield tremendous influence in Israel’s government and could dilute
the nation’s
Jewish character. The annexationists say they have solutions to that
problem ranging from creating high bars for citizenship to the mass
immigration of a million or more Jews from around the world, especially
the United States.
The status quo will not hold, they argue, and it is time to pursue their goals in the open.
The deputy foreign minister, Zeev
Elkin, a staunch opponent of a two-state solution, said at a
conference last year that “regardless of the world’s opposition, it’s
time to do in Judea and Samaria what we did in [East] Jerusalem and the
Golan.”
After
the 1967 war, Israel incorporated East Jerusalem into the greater
Jerusalem municipality. Israel annexed the Golan Heights in 1981.
However, both remain
contested territories.
‘Tranquilizing Plan’
The debate among annexationists is not whether to take greater control of the West Bank — it is how much to take.
The
Oslo Accords of 1993 divided the West Bank into three areas. In areas A
and B, which constitute about 40 percent of the West Bank and include
the major
Palestinian cities and most of the Palestinian population, the
Palestinian Authority was promised full civil control and full or shared
security duties. In Area C, the Israeli military maintains full civil
and security control.
Area C is the least populated and includes the Jordan Valley, the border area that Israelis
say is crucial for maintaining security.
Economy
Minister Naftali Bennett, who also leads the political party called the
Jewish Home, published his “Tranquilizing Plan” last year, whereby
Israel would
unilaterally annex Area C and leave areas A and B to be administered by
the Palestinian Authority with oversight by Israel security forces.
Bennett
said the 48,000 Palestinians living in Area C — others say there are
three times as many — would be offered Israeli citizenship or residency.
The 350,000
or so Jewish settlers, who are already Israeli citizens, would remain,
and their population and settlements, which would become towns, would
grow.
Uri
Ariel, the housing minister, has said he would start with Area C and
continue to assert sovereignty in stages to eventually annex all of the
West Bank.
Ariel
said Palestinians who wish to become citizens would have to apply and
meet criteria such as speaking Hebrew and pledging allegiance to Israel.
Hotovely,
the deputy transportation minister, said she envisions annexing all of
the West Bank and granting its residents full Israeli citizenship. She
said
her Greater Israel would remain democratic and Jewish by encouraging the
mass migration of Jews from around the world to Israel.
“This
is not a binational state. There will still be 70 to 75 percent Jews,
with a large minority of Palestinians,” Hotovely said. “Israel can live
with this
reality.”