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Israel
still violates US's vision for peace in the Middle East
August 24, 2005
Aref Assaf, President
American Arab Forum
Published in Aramica, 9/22/2005
Israel still violates US's
vision for peace in the Middle East
As
pro-Israel apologists glowingly speak of Israel’s sacrifices for peace in the
Middle East by its disengagement from Gaza, Israel continues to build more
settlements in the rest of the occupied Palestinian territories. A just
published report by the Israeli government declares that the number of West Bank
settlers has increased by 10000 this year alone.
True, Israel's
colonization of Gaza may have ended but its occupation as defined by
international law persists. As such, the conflict is now faced with two
volatile imperatives. First, Israel’s
unilateralism has replaced bilateral negotiations; second, limited conflict
management has replaced permanent conflict resolution.
The
Israeli cabinet recently approved a decision to complete Israel's Apartheid wall
in East Jerusalem by the end of August. Alarmingly, the Israeli government
recently gave a preliminary approval to expropriate more Arab lands in and
around the congested Old City of Jerusalem to build a Jewish settlement. This
clearly violates President George W. Bush's May warning not to prejudice the
status of Jerusalem and other outstanding and
final-status issues
between Israel and the Palestinians.
Doubtless, the planned expansion of Israel's
barrier in the occupied West Bank could have serious consequences for the future
of peace in the Middle East. The Israeli government has announced plans to seize
large tracts of land from Palestinians to wall off Ma'aleh Adumim, one of the
largest Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Israel plans is to build 3,500
Israeli housing units to the east of Jerusalem - in an area, which would
complete the encirclement of occupied East Jerusalem by Israeli settlements.
This would effectively cut the West Bank into two divided northern and southern
sections and increase the isolation and encirclement of Arab East Jerusalem. The
Israeli daily Ha'aretz reported on August 24, 2005 "The planned route would put
the easternmost point of the fence around Ma'aleh Adumim some 25 kilometers from
the Green Line or about half the width of the West Bank”
The wall, which Israel is using to redefine
Jerusalem's borders, is also being routed through occupied territory in such a
way as to maximize the number of Palestinian Jerusalemites behind the wall,
while maximizing the amount of Palestinian land on the "Israeli" side. About
55,000 Palestinian residents of Jerusalem will be effectively cut off from the
their city, forced to access their schools, hospitals and even families through
Israeli military gates which, as Palestinians know from experience, can be
closed at a soldier's whim. These Palestinian Christians and Muslims will be
denied free access to the holy sites in their own city. Already, Palestinian
Christians and Muslims in the West Bank can no longer freely pray at the Old
City's Church of the Holy Sepulcher or the Noble Sanctuary (Haram al Sharif).
Consequently,
Palestinian Jerusalemites are now forced to
go deeper into the West Bank for educational, medical and religious services.
This has given Israel a pretext - "insufficient links" to the city - for
revoking their Jerusalem residency rights. Thus far, more than 6,500 Palestinians
have lost their residency rights in the Jewish state's unstated but deliberate
efforts to rid the Holy City of its Arab citizens.
Israeli demolitions of Palestinian homes in
and around occupied East Jerusalem are increasingly common, with more than 50
homes destroyed so far this year. Sixty-four homes in a Palestinian neighborhood
near Jerusalem's Old City have demolition orders pending against them, even
though the homes were built on privately owned Palestinian land. According to
the Israeli Committee Against Home Demolitions, there are more than 10,000
outstanding demolition orders against Palestinian buildings in East Jerusalem.
Such orders are usually enforced without warning and in the middle of the night.
Israel unilaterally insists on retaining full
control over the whole of Jerusalem, rejecting Palestinian compromises to share
the city on equal terms. Indeed, Israel, as a Jewish state, rejects the very
idea of a pluralistic Jerusalem. However, Jerusalem is sacred to all three of
the world's monotheistic religions - it cannot be the monopoly of just one.
As for the planned Israeli settlement inside
of the walled Old City, Israel will build about thirty homes and a synagogue in
a vacant area at the northeastern tip of the Old City, adjacent to the city
wall, near Herod's Gate. On m y recent trip to Jerusalem, I walked through the
area and believe it to be one of the few remaining open spaces in the City. The
site is deep inside the Muslim Quarter, accessible only via pedestrian walkways
through residential areas of the Muslim Quarter. It is not connected to or
directly accessible from the Jewish Quarter, which is located in the southern
part of the Old City.
The establishment of a Jewish neighborhood in
the Old City's Muslim Quarter is another Israeli unilateral act that would
predetermine the results of final status negotiations and render impede the political
resolution of the thorny issue of Jerusalem. The plan
conflicts with the fundamental rationale for negotiations (i.e., that competing
claims should be resolved through agreements), undermines the credibility of
pro-peace Palestinian leaders who support negotiations, and strengthens
extremists who argue that the Road Map and disengagement are a pretext for
Israel to strengthen its hold on Jerusalem and the West Bank. The new Israel
settlement on the hand is a deliberate attempt to increase the Jewish presence
in the City by forcefully altering its demographic make up. This is being done
with US government’s approval and funding.
Over $ 4 billions from the American taxpayer
annually fund Israeli violations of U.S. policy and international law. Yet
Israel thanks American goodwill and financial support by adopting measures to
which the United States is opposed and which risk destroying the very two-state
solution to which President Bush is so publicly committed. As such, America has
so far not been willing to hold Israel accountable. Such inaction reduces U.S.
credibility and alienates potential friends, undermining efforts to defeat
terrorism and to build Middle East democracy.
End
Aref Assaf
The American Arab Forum, USA. AAF is
a non-partisan and non-sectarian organization, is a registered tax-exempt, and
not-for-profit organization under section 501(c)(3) of the IRS code. We
endeavor to provide reliable and credible information and resources to and about
the Arab American community in New Jersey and the United States.
www.americanarabforum.org
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