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  Illegal Settlements Bonanza:  Israel Plots an Endgame  By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, Monday, May 7, 2012 
 Israel’s colonization policies are entering an alarming new 
	phase, comparable in historic magnitude to the original plans to colonize 
	Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem following the war of 1967.
 
 On April 24, 2012, an Israeli ministerial committee approved three (illegal 
	Israeli) settlement outposts - Bruchin and Rechelim in the northern part of 
	the West Bank, and Sansana in the south. Although all settlement activities 
	in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem are considered illegal by 
	international law, Israeli law differentiates between sanctioned settlements 
	and ‘illegal’ ones. This distinction has actually proved to be no more than 
	a disingenuous attempt at conflating international law, which is applicable 
	to occupied lands, and Israeli law, which is in no way relevant.
 
 Since 1967, Israel placed occupied Palestinian land, privately owned or 
	otherwise, into various categories. One of these categories is 
	‘state-owned’, as in obtained by virtue of military occupation. For many 
	years, the ‘state-owned’ occupied land was allotted to various purposes. 
	Since 1990, however, the Israeli government refrained from establishing 
	settlements, at lease formally. Now, according to the Israeli 
	anti-settlement group, Peace Now,  “instead of going to peace the 
	government is announcing the establishment of three new settlements…this 
	announcement is against the Israeli interest of achieving peace and a two 
	states solution”
 
 Although the group argues that the four-man 
	committee did not have the authority to make such a decision, it actually 
	matters little. Every physical space in the occupied territories – whether 
	privately owned or ‘state owned’, ‘legally’ obtained or ‘illegally’ obtained 
	– is free game. The extremist Jewish settlers, whose tentacles are reaching 
	far and wide, chasing out Palestinians at every corner, haven’t received 
	such empowering news since the heyday of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel 
	Sharon.
 
 The move regarding settlements is not an isolated one. The 
	Israeli government is now challenging the very decisions made by the Israeli 
	Supreme Court, which has been used as a legitimization platform for many 
	illegal settlements that drove Palestinians from their land.
 
 On 
	April 27, the Israeli government reportedly asked the high court to delay 
	the demolition of an ‘unauthorized’ West Bank outpost in the Beit El 
	settlement which was scheduled to take place on May 1st. The land, even by 
	Israeli legal standards, is considered private Palestinian land, and the 
	Israeli government had committed to the court to take down the illegal 
	outposts – again, per Israeli definition – on the specified date.
 
 Now the rightwing Netanyahu government is having another change of 
	heart. In its request to the court, the government argued: “The evacuation 
	of the buildings could carry social, political and operational ramifications 
	for construction in Beit El and other settlements.” Such an argument, if 
	applied in the larger context of the occupied territories, could easily 
	justify why no outposts should be taken down. It could eradicate, once and 
	for all, such politically inconvenient terms such as ‘legal’ and ‘illegal’.
 
 “Previous Israeli governments have pledged to demolish the unauthorized 
	settler outposts in the West Bank, but only a handful have been removed,” 
	according to CNN online. In fact, that ‘handful’ are likely to be rebuilt, 
	amongst many more new outposts, now that the new legal precedence is 
	underway.
 
 Michael Sfard, an attorney with Yesh Din, which 
	reportedly advocates Palestinian rights, described the request as “an 
	announcement of war by the Israeli government against the rule of law.” More 
	specifically, “they said clearly that they have reached a decision not to 
	evacuate illegal construction on private Palestinian property.”
 
 Some analysts suggested that Netanyahu was bowing down to the more rightwing 
	elements in his cabinet – as if the man had, till now, been a peacemaker. 
	The bottom line is that Israel has decided embark on a new and dangerous 
	phase, one that violates not only international law, but Israel’s own 
	self-tailored laws that were designed to colonize the occupied territories. 
	It appears that even those precarious ‘laws’ are no longer capable of 
	meeting the colonial appetite of Israeli settlers and the ruling class.
 
 Israeli settlements have been contextualized through Israeli legal and 
	political references, as opposed to references commonly accepted in 
	international law. The emphasis on differences between Israeli governments, 
	political parties and religious/ultra-nationalist settlement movements is 
	distracting and misleading; colonizing the rest of historic Palestine has 
	been and remains a national Israeli project.
 
 An article in the 
	rightwing Israeli Jerusalem Post agrees. “Support for settlement is not 
	simply a program of right-of-center Likud. Its history has firm roots in 
	Labor party activity during the periods of its governments, and activities 
	by predecessors of the Labor party going back before the creation of the 
	Israeli state” (April 27).
 
 The only variable that might be worth 
	examining is the purpose of the settlement, not the settlement itself. 
	Following the war of 1967, the Allon plan sought to annex more than 30 
	percent of the West Bank and all of Gaza for security purposes.  It 
	stipulated the establishment of a “security corridor” along the Jordan 
	River, as well outside the “Green Line”, a one-sided Israeli demarcation of 
	its borders with the West Bank. Then, there was no Likud party to demonize, 
	for that was the Labor party’s vision for the newly occupied territories.
 
 While the Israeli settlement drive since then has swallowed much of 
	the West Bank and East Jerusalem, populating them with over half a million 
	Israelis, the international community’s response was as moot in 1967 as it 
	is now in 2012. Responding to the latest sanctioning of illegal outposts, UN 
	Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon declared that he was “deeply troubled” by the 
	news. Meanwhile, Russia was ‘deeply concerned’ and so was the EU’s Catherine 
	Ashton. As for the US, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland insisted 
	that the Israeli measure is not “helpful to the process.” What process?
 
 While Israel has now showed all of its cards, and the international 
	community declared its complacency or impotence, the Palestinian leadership 
	in Ramallah continues to plan some kind of UN censure of the settlements. 
	Even if a watered-down version of some UN draft managed to survive the US 
	veto, what are the chances of Israel heeding the call of international 
	community?
 
 There is no doubt that Israel is plotting its version of 
	the endgame in Palestine, which sees Palestinians continuing to subsist in 
	physical fragmentation and permanent occupation. Unless a popular 
	Palestinian uprising takes hold, no one is likely to challenge what is 
	actually an Israeli declaration of war against the Palestinian people.
 
 - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
 
 
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