Border idea roils waters in Israel

Published March 12, 2006

JERUSALEM: With Israeli elections less than three weeks away, a furore erupted on Friday over acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s declaration that in the next four years Israel would draw its own borders, roughly following the route of a barrier being built in the West Bank.

Both right- and left-wing opponents expressed outrage over Olmert’s plan, spelled out in interviews that appeared on Friday in major Israeli newspapers. The fate of Jewish settlements in the West Bank, home to about 250,000 Israelis, is a major issue in the campaign leading up to the March 28 elections.

Olmert’s centrist Kadima movement leads each of his opponents in the right-leaning Likud Party and left-leaning Labor by about a 2-1 margin. Olmert, who assumed the national leadership after Prime Minister Ariel Sharon was incapacitated by a massive stroke two months ago, has said Israel will maintain its grip on some of the largest West Bank settlement blocks that lie close to the ‘Green Line’, the armistice boundary in place at the end of the 1967 Middle East War.

But in the interviews, Olmert laid out the most detailed scenario yet of Israel’s plans for the West Bank. The plans call for uprooting some Jewish settlements and rerouting the barrier to include other outposts. “We will adjust the [barrier’s] route either to the east or the west in accordance with internal Israeli agreement,” Olmert told the Yediot Aharonot newspaper. “The fence ... will be the borderline that will separate Israel and the Palestinians.”

Speaking to the Maariv daily, he added, “At the end of this process, we will achieve a complete separation from the vast majority of the Palestinian population.” An estimated 3.2 million Palestinians live in the West Bank. The barrier, a patchwork of fences, concrete walls, watchtowers and patrol roads, has cut off tens of thousands of them from the rest of the territory. In general, Israeli leftists oppose unilateral measures because they believe the border should be set through negotiations with the Palestinians.

At the same time, Olmert’s right-wing opponents believe Israel should not cede territory without concessions from the Palestinians. Uzi Landau of the Likud Party said Olmert’s plan, with pullbacks from large swaths of the West Bank, would not provide Israel with sufficient protection against Hamas. Speaking on Israel Radio, Landau likened such a plan to ‘letting a little kid play with matches’. Yossi Beilin, who heads the left-leaning Meretz-Yahad party, also criticized Olmert — but because his plan called for Israeli construction in a corridor between mainly Palestinian East Jerusalem and the West Bank’s largest Jewish settlement, Maale Adumim. Beilin, an architect of the 1993 Oslo peace accords, told Israel Radio that such a course of action ‘is essentially preventing a permanent Israeli-Palestinian accord’.

The Palestinian Authority, led by President Mahmoud Abbas, has said it opposes unilateral Israeli measures. .—Dawn/The Los Angeles Times News Service

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