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WASHINGTON, DC April 5, 2005 -- In keeping with its recent concern over Israeli settlement expansion plans in the area of occupied East Jerusalem, ATFP, in conjunction with Americans For Peace Now and the Foundation for Middle East peace, held a Capitol Hill briefing, "Is Jerusalem-Area Settlement Expansion Closing the Door on the Two-State Solution?" The briefing addressed whether or not Jerusalem-area settlement expansion is foreclosing the option a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and featured two of the leading experts on the subject, Israeli attorney Danny Seidemann and Dan Rothem, Director of Research at the Center for Middle East Peace and Economic Cooperation.

Seidemann identified three policies, not attempted by any previous Israeli government, that the Sharon government is attempting to implement with the aim of transforming East Jerusalem into ‘Israel proper’ and turning East Jerusalemite Palestinians into ‘Israelis of the Islamic persuasion.’ The first is the application of the Absentee Property law, an attempt that failed due to its revocation by the Israeli Attorney General. The second is the expected requirement of permits for East Jerusalem Palestinians to visit Ramallah and its environs. The third and most serious are settlement expansion plans in the Jerusalem area.

Of the three main ‘cloverleaf-shaped’ settlement areas extending out of Jerusalem, the most controversial is Maaleh Adumin, part of the E1 plan for the Jerusalem area. What the E1 plan means in actuality is that Sharon perceives that Israeli sovereignty over Greater Jerusalem does not only mean the capital, but also the surrounding environment. The route of the barrier lining up with settlement activity proves this. E1 is not merely another resettlement expansion, but a strategic deviation from the status quo outside the framework of the political process. It will a) sever the West Bank into 2 with no natural contiguity and b) will render impossible a Palestinian capital in East Jerusalem.

The Gaza withdrawal is being used by Sharon, Seidemann said, to get a ‘green light’ for the route of the barrier to follow the 3 major Jerusalem-area settlement blocks. Sharon also believes that it is possible to arrive at a ‘non-violent state of equilibrium with the Palestinians’ while achieving these goals. The Israeli argument that ‘what comes up can come down’ as refers to the barrier, becomes meaningless and irreversible when the barrier is lined with Israeli settlements.

Seidemann stressed that no Palestinian leadership or world public opinion would allow for a dismembered non-contiguous Palestinian state to be established. The absence of a Palestinian state will make the bi-national state the only alternative and will result in the permanent ‘Balkanization’ of the conflict.

Such a strategy may very well jeopardize the very viability of Israel as a Jewish state. The end of the option of a two-state solution due to the absence of a Palestinian state will in the final analysis mean no ‘Jewish’ state of Israel.

Despite all this, Seidemann did identify some signs of hope, namely recent strong verbal statements by top U.S. officials, including President Bush, on the settlements issue; the revocation of the Absentee Property Law; the removal of the ‘no partner for peace’ argument due to Arafat’s death; and the growing belief of the Israeli public that Abu Mazen is serious about peace. The resulting current political horizon provides the potential for stopping Sharon’s unilateral actions.

Finally, Seidemann noted that Sharon’s upcoming trip to the U.S., during which he is seeking tacit U.S. consent for E1, is a critical one, and it is imperative for the U.S. to say that Sharon may only pursue E1 as part of a negotiation process with the Palestinians and not unilaterally. This, he said, would affirm President Bush’s 2004 letter to Sharon, which says that ‘any final status agreement will only be achieved on the basis of mutually agreed changes that reflect these realities,’ i.e. emphasizing negotiation along with recognizing events on the ground. The challenge, Seidemann concluded, ‘is how to proceed from the politically impossible to the historically inevitable.’

CALL TO ACTION: ATFP urges all those who believe in a two-state solution resulting in a contiguous, viable and independent Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders with its capital in East Jerusalem, to contact the White House and urge President Bush to stand by the Roadmap so that the historic mistake foreclosing the two-state solution is not made.

White House Contact Information
Mailing Address:
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500

Phone: 202-456-1111
Fax: 202-456-2461

Email: president@whitehouse.gov

 
 
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