Israel Update for October 2010



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PM Netanyahu reminded his Knesset colleagues that his government 'removed hundreds of roadblocks and checkpoints' in Judea and Samaria. 'We also encouraged impressive growth in the Palestinian economy - impressive by any standards, especially given the fact that at the same time the entire world was mired in recession and economic crisis.'

Hours after Netanyahu delivered his Knesset speech; senior PA peace negotiator Saeb Erekat said Palestinian leaders 'forcefully reject all these Israeli games.' He also told reporters that 'the racist demands of Netanyahu cannot be tied to the request to cease building in the settlements for the purpose of establishing a state.'

Palestinians To Declare Statehood Next Year

PA leaders stated during October that they will announce the formation of a sovereign Palestinian state in the coming months whether Israeli leaders accept such a unilateral act or not. The first indication that a statehood declaration is in the planning stages was given by PA leader Mahmoud Abbas during an Arab League summit meeting in Libya early in the month. He told his Arab colleagues that he is 'considering' such a move. His statement came after the Arab League formally backed his decision to withdraw from US-sponsored face to face peace talks with Israel due to the resumption of home building in the disputed territories.

Later in the month, PA Prime Minister Salaam Fayyad told an Italian newspaper reporter that a unilateral statehood declaration would be issued in August next year. 'The deadline is next summer, when the Israeli occupation of the West Bank must end.' He added that 'In 2011 we celebrate 66 years of the United Nations and the United Nations will celebrate the birth of our nation.' He maintained that the Palestinian Authority is doing 'everything we can to build national institutions in the West Bank in preparation for an independent Palestinian state.'

When asked how such a statehood declaration would affect the Hamas ruled Gaza Strip, Fayyad declared that 'the people of Gaza must be involved in our national project.' Admitting that there are what he termed 'gaps' between the PA and Hamas, the Palestinian Prime Minister went on to maintain that 'the real gap is the wall that closes off the Gaza Strip.' He did not mention that the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat had been given a fair chance by Israeli leaders to establish a viable government in the Gaza Strip, which was not overturned by any Israeli action but by the militant Iranian-backed Hamas coup in June 2007 which ousted PA officials from the coastal zone.

EU May Support Unilateral Declaration

Israeli political analysts said they doubted that a unilateral PA statehood declaration with defined borders would be endorsed by the United States and many other world governments. In fact, the American State Department issued a statement which echoed PM Netanyahu's position that only direct peace negotiations between Israeli and Palestinian leaders can bring about the creation of a Palestinian state. Analysts added that any unilateral PA statehood declaration would certainly not force the Premier to withdraw IDF soldiers from contested land even if UN peacekeeping troops were to be stationed in Judea and Samaria, as PA leaders insist will occur. Nor will it help resolve the issue of what to do with nearly 300,000 Israelis currently living in areas that the PA regards as inside its future sovereign borders, including Jerusalem's Old City and surrounding neighborhoods.

PM Netanyahu characterized the proposed unilateral PA statehood declaration as 'an irresponsible move' that may result in 'a worsening of the conflict and an increase in terror.' Still analysts said the Premier was quite concerned over indications from France and Spain that the European Union might support such a one-sided statehood declaration at the United Nations. While visiting Jerusalem and Ramallah in early October, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner told reporters that while a unilateral declaration is 'not the preferred way' to help the Palestinians establish an independent state; it may turn out to be 'an acceptable route.' The French official was accompanied on his visit by Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Moratinos, who has since been assigned to another cabinet position. Moratinos, who served in the past as the EU's Middle East peace envoy, said he agreed with his French colleague's statement. Prime Minister Netanyahu's office said that the PM had asked the two European officials to pass along to PA leaders Israel's contention that direct peace negotiations with his government is the only realistic method to establish a viable Palestinian state.

Analysts said Spanish support for a PA statehood declaration could prove crucial at the UN since Spain's next door neighbor Portugal won a rotating seat on the UN Security Council in early October, beating out Canada for the position by securing massive international Muslim support. Israeli officials expressed private unhappiness that the Obama administration did not do more to back Canada's bid despite the fact that the country is among the closest US allies in the world. Canadian officials admitted that pro-Israeli stance expressed by Canadian Prime Minister Steven Harper was the main reason that the country did not win a seat on the powerful Security Council.

Meanwhile some Israeli Knesset members are working on new legislation that would require a national referendum vote before the government could relinquish any land in Jordan's former West Bank, including in Jerusalem, or the Golan Heights that was captured from Syria forces in 1967. The eastern half of Jerusalem and the strategic Golan plateau, which feeds vital fresh water in the Sea of Galilee, were formally annexed by Israel in the early 1980s. The proposed referendum law is not being sponsored by the Netanyahu government even though many members of the ruling coalition say they will support it. Defense Minister Ehud Barak, who heads the coalition Labor party, has come out strongly against the legislation, maintaining it needlessly throws another obstacle in the way of negotiating successful peace accords with the Palestinians and Syria. Opinion surveys show a substantial majority of Israeli voters oppose giving up any part of Jerusalem or the Golan Heights.

More Trouble From Iran

Israeli security forces shot dead a senior Hamas militia commander in the city of Hebron the second week of October who they said was behind the brutal murder of four Israeli civilians in August, including a pregnant mother. A Hamas spokesman denounced the action as 'a slap in the face for all those who are still betting on their relations with the occupation.' Several weeks later, the West African nation of Nigeria reportedly intercepted 13 cargo containers which were filled with Iranian weapons bound for Hamas operatives. Israeli security officials said the weapons were meant to be smuggled into the Gaza Strip via tunnels under the southern border with Egypt, and possibly also be sea. Intercepted from a ship parked at the port in Lagos, the containers were reportedly filled with rocket launchers, hand grenades and landmines. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad paid a state visit to Nigeria last year and has increased trade with the large country.

The Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz reported that recent satellite photos posted at Google Earth show Hizbullah forces stationed at a Syrian missile base in the city of Adra, northeast of Damascus. The Lebanese Shiite operatives were thought to be receiving instructions at the base about how to maintain and fire powerful Scud D missiles that are known to be in Syria's heavy weapons arsenal. Israeli officials said earlier this year that Scud D missile parts were being smuggled into Lebanon on Syrian commercial trucks. Israeli Military Intelligence Commander Yossi Baidatz told a Knesset committee that 'Hizbullah has thousands of rockets of all kinds and ranges.' The Scud Ds are an improved version of the Scud C missiles that were fired at Israel by Saddam Hussein in 1991.

The Iranian leader visited Lebanon on October 13 where he issued more existential threats against Israel and blasted the United States and its allies for imposing economic sanctions on his country. After being awarded an honorary doctorate in political science at Beirut University-which one Lebanese politician termed equivalent to giving a Nobel peace prize to a mass murderer like Adolph Hitler or Pol Pot-Ahmadinejad said that 'all of Lebanon has become a university for jihad.' Many Lebanese Christian and Sunni Muslim politicians publicly opposed the visit, which was widely seen as a move to strengthen the Shiite Hizbullah movement said to be plotting to take over the entire Lebanese government with the backing of Iran and Syria. Israeli officials denounced the visit in strong terms. A Foreign Ministry spokesman said Ahmadinejad had gone to Lebanon 'like a landlord coming to inspect his domain.' Binyamin Netanyahu's chief spokesman Mark Regev told reporters that 'Iran's domination of Lebanon through its proxy Hizbullah has destroyed any chance for peace, has turned Lebanon into an Iranian satellite and made Lebanon a hub for regional terror and instability.'

Israeli officials strongly denounced several statements made at a synod gathering of Roman Catholic bishops held at the Vatican in October. They were particularly insulted when the head of the Greek Melkite Church in the United States, Archbishop Salim Butros, maintained it was 'unacceptable' for Israel to put forward 'biblical positions that use the word of God to wrongly justify injustices.' Echoing traditional Catholic doctrine that was officially repudiated during the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s, he went on to maintain that, 'We Christians cannot speak of the Promised Land as an exclusive right for a privileged Jewish people,' since 'this promise was nullified by Christ.' Going even further, the Archbishop declared that, 'The concept of the promised land cannot be used as a base for the justification of the return of Jews to Israel and the displacement of Palestinians.' An Israeli official noted that the New Testament quotes Jesus as saying that He had come to confirm and fulfill the ancient Jewish biblical laws along with the teachings and oracles given by the Hebrew prophets, not to erase or nullify them.

Whatever political and religious leaders say or do, the God of Israel will have the final say regarding His ancient covenant people and Promised Land. 'The Lord reigns, He is clothed with majesty! The Lord has clothed and girded Himself with strength.' (Psalm 93:1) CR

The opinions expressed in this article are not necessarily those held by Cross Rhythms. Any expressed views were accurate at the time of publishing but may or may not reflect the views of the individuals concerned at a later date.