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  Grabbing More Palestinian Lands: 
	 Israel's Doomsday E-1 Settlement  By Nicola Nasser Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 10, 2012 
 Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has definitely crossed 
	an international red line to vindicate a swift and firm rejection from 
	Israel’s closest allies when he announced plans recently to build a new 
	settlement on a corridor of occupied Palestinian land in East Jerusalem, 
	which will render any prospective Palestinian contiguous state territorially 
	impossible. Daniel Seidemann, the Israeli founder of Terrestrial Jerusalem, 
	has condemned it as “the doomsday settlement” and “not a routine” one.
 
 Netanyahu risks a diplomatic confrontation that will not develop into a 
	diplomatic isolation of Israel because Israel’s allies have decided to 
	pressure him to backtrack by “incentives and disincentives” instead of 
	“sanctions,” in the words of the British Foreign Secretary William Hague.
 
 Summoning Israeli ambassadors to protest Netanyahu’s plans by 
	Australia, Brazil, France, UK, Sweden, Denmark and Spain was nonetheless an 
	unusual international outcry because “if implemented,” his “plans would 
	alter the situation, with Jerusalem as a shared capital increasingly 
	difficult to achieve,” according to William Hague, thus “seriously 
	undermining the two - state solution” of the Palestinian – Israeli conflict 
	according to the French foreign ministry spokesman Philippe Lalliot, which 
	is a “solution without which there will never be security in Israel,” 
	according to the Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr.
 
 The 
	international outcry is not against the Israeli policy of settlements on 
	Palestinian occupied land per se, but against this one particular E-1 
	settlement, which was Netanyahu’s answer to the overwhelming recent 
	recognition of Palestine as a non-member state by the UN General Assembly.
 
 Because, on the ground, the site of some 4.6 square miles (12 square 
	km) of this settlement on the easternmost edge of eastern Jerusalem will 
	close the only territorial link between the north and south of the West Bank 
	and sever it from East Jerusalem, the prospective capital of the State of 
	Palestine, thus undermining any viable and contiguous Palestinian state on 
	the territories occupied by Israel in 1967 and turning the recognition of 
	the UN General Assembly on November 29, 2012 as merely a Palestinian paper 
	achievement.
 
 The U.S. and the EU opposed the E-1 (East One) plan 
	since it was taken out of Israeli drawers in 2005; because they were alert 
	to its potential undermining effect on the “peace process.” Now, the five 
	permanent members of the UN Security Council and the United Nations have all 
	warned against the E-1 plan.
 
 The White House and US State Department 
	described the plan as “unilateral,” “counterproductive,” “sets back” peace 
	efforts,  “especially damaging to efforts to achieve a two-state 
	solution,” “complicate efforts to resume direct, bilateral negotiations” and 
	“risk prejudging the outcome” of such negotiations, and “contrary to US 
	policy.”
 
 The EU high Representative Catherine Ashton on Dec. 2 said 
	she was “extremely concerned,” described the plan as “an obstacle to peace,” 
	condemning “all settlement construction” as “illegal under international 
	law,” a judgment shared by UK’s William Hague who added the plan “would 
	undermine Israel’s international reputation and create doubts about its 
	stated commitment to achieving peace.” Italian Premier Mario Monti and 
	French President Francois Hollande in a joint statement said they were 
	"deeply worried" by the plan. German government spokesman Steffen Seibert 
	said his country was “deeply concerned.” Sweden’s Foreign Minister Carl 
	Bildt said the plan was “extremely worrying.”
 
 China’s Foreign 
	Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said his country “has always firmly opposed 
	Israel's construction of settlements in the occupied Palestinian territory 
	of East Jerusalem and the West Bank.” Russia “views” the plan “with the most 
	serious concern” because it “would have a very negative effect.” UN 
	Secretary General Ban Ki-moon warned the plan “would represent an almost 
	fatal blow to remaining chances of securing a two-state solution.”
 
 All the five permanent members of the UN Security Council and the United 
	Nations called on Israel to “rescind,” “reconsider,” “reverse” its plans, 
	“go back on them,”  “exercise restraint” and “eliminate obstacles to 
	the peace talks with Palestine.”
 
 However, when it comes to 
	translating their words into action they stand helpless, to render all their 
	statements “an audio phenomenon” as described by Abdul Bari Atwan, the 
	editor–in–chief of the London – based Arabic daily Al-Quds Al–Arabi, a 
	hollow outcry short of an overdue action by the world community.
 
 It 
	is no surprise therefore that Netanyahu is encouraged enough to insist on 
	pursuing his plans.
 
 The international community’s inaction could not 
	but vindicate the expected Palestinian reaction. President Mahmoud Abbas 
	late on Dec. 4 chaired a Palestinian leadership meeting in Ramallah, 
	attended for the first time by the representatives of the rival Hamas and 
	Islamic Jihad movements. They decided to ask the UN Security Council to 
	adopt a binding resolution obliging Israel to stop all settlement activities 
	in the occupied State of Palestine, concluding that Israel “is forcing us to 
	go to the International Criminal Court (ICC).”
 
 Netanyahu’s defiance 
	and the Palestinian leadership’s decision will both put the credibility of 
	all the five permanent members of the UN Security Council to an historic 
	test: They either decide to act on their own words or their inaction will 
	inevitably leave the Palestinians with the only option of defending their 
	very existence by all the means available to them.
 
 For Palestinians, 
	to be or not to be has become an existential issue that could no longer be 
	entrusted to international community.
 
 Nicola Nasser 
	is a veteran Arab journalist based in Bir Zeit, West Bank of the 
	Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories. He can be reached at:
	nassernicola@ymail.com
 
 
 
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