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  • Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, to whom the Trump administration has pledged its undying loyalty.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, to whom the Trump administration has pledged its undying loyalty. | Photo: Reuters

Published 8 November 2017
Opinion

"Save Jewish Jerusalem" enlisted politicians, academics and other prominent Israelis united by the fear they "would wake up with a Palestinian mayor in Jerusalem."

The postponing of an Israeli Knesset Bill that would have annexed major illegal Jewish settlements in the West Bank to the Jerusalem municipality is the result of behind-the-scenes U.S. and, possibly, European pressure, but the story of the so-called 'Greater Jerusalem law' does not end there.

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Israel wants to maintain an absolute demographic Jewish majority in Jerusalem, including in occupied and illegally annexed Palestinian East Jerusalem. There is enough support in the Knesset and among the public to ensure that coveted Jewish dominance, but the political balances and possible drawbacks are just too delicate and great for Israel to get exactly what it wants, even if there is a clear consensus among Israeli Jewish politicians and the public to permanently change the status of the city.

The Trump factor

One of the factors that the Israeli government is considering is the support of the Donald Trump administration. How far will Trump go to support Israeli transgressions, while continuing to advocate an 'ultimate deal': his own version of finding a political resolution to the conflict resulting from Israel's illegal occupation of Palestine?

True, the Trump administration has done its utmost to reassure Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of its undying loyalty. Trump's last visit to Israel was a major step in that direction, where US commitment to Israel's security and future were made abundantly and repeatedly clear. Moreover, the joint U.S.-Israel push against the United Nations and its smaller institutions – such as UNESCO and UNHRC – led by U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley aims to torpedo future international initiatives that are critical of Israel's military occupation of Palestine.

Yet, on the other hand, using back channels and without much fanfare, Trump has been promoting his own plan for 'regional peace', marks of which are still unclear.

While Israel is routinely allowed to slowly alter the landscape of occupied Palestinian areas, construct walls and expand its illegal settlements, an explicit, major plan to annex large regions of the West Bank would have ignited the kind of backlash that could likely bring an end to Trump's Middle East politicking and complicate his relations with various Arab governments.

The 'Greater Jerusalem law' would have done just that.

According to Israeli commentator Shlomo Elder, the idea of expanding Jerusalem's municipal borders "to increase the city's population and to ensure its Jewish majority" was proposed by hardline Likud party member Yisrael Katz in 2007. It was deferred then, due to the fear of a strong international reaction.

Logical evolution

The idea did not die. It morphed into a movement and politicians from all ideological backgrounds joined in, fearing that, in the future, Israel will lose the 'demographic war' in Jerusalem, as well as in the rest of historic Palestine.

"Save Jewish Jerusalem" was launched in 2016 and quickly enlisted the support of politicians, academicians and other well-regarded Israelis, all united by their fear that they "would wake up with a Palestinian mayor in Jerusalem."

So, when the 'Greater Jerusalem law' was introduced earlier this year, it seemed like the logical evolution of a current that has been on the rise for years.

The bill proposed expanding the municipal boundaries of Jerusalem to include major illegal Jewish settlements in the West Bank, such as Ma'aleh Adumim and the Gush Etzion settlement cluster. Moreover, it endeavored to bring 150,000 Jewish settlers into Jerusalem as eligible voters, who would have naturally tipped the political scene more to the right. Concurrently, the law would have further demoted the status of 100,000 Palestinians, who would find themselves in a political gray area.

The authors of the bill were hardly discrete about its intentions. One of the two authors is Katz himself, now a minister in Netanyahu's right-wing government. Explaining the motives behind the bill, Katz blatantly said it aims to "ensure a Jewish majority in the united city."

Israelis agree. According to a national poll published on November 3, 72 percent of Israeli Jews want Israel to maintain control over Muslim holy sites in Jerusalem; 68 percent want Jews to be able to pray in these holy sites, and 58 percent support Katz's initiative to expand the Jerusalem municipal boundaries and merge major illegal Jewish settlements under one municipality.

While members of the Israeli government (and majority in the Knesset) work towards the same goal of expanding illegal settlements, ensuring Israel's uncontested control over Jerusalem and thwarting Palestinian aspirations for an independent state, their political approaches are not always the same. Netanyahu’s style is different from Katz.

Creeping annexation

While paying lip service to peace, Netanyahu has no intentions of allowing a Palestinian state to ever take shape, and is tactically working to ensure a complete physical partition between East Jerusalem and the West Bank, while simultaneously linking major settlement blocs to Jerusalem.

One such effort is the recent decision to completely destroy the two Palestinian villages of Khan Al-Ahmar (located in the E-1 corridor which connects Jerusalem to Ma'aleh Adumim) and Susya. The ethnic-cleansing plan was described by Israeli rights group B'Tselem as "virtually unprecedented."

But Netanyahu had to temporarily flout his own method of 'creeping annexation' of Palestinian land to join the burgeoning movement championed by Katz and others, who call for wholesale annexation and dramatic steps to ensure Jewish dominance.

By doing so, he was prepared to deal with another popular Palestinian revolt, similar to the one that culminated last July in protest of Israel's closure of the al-Haram al-Sharif/al-Aqsa compound.

However, pressure emanating in Washington, which reportedly took place just as the Knesset's ministerial committee on legislation was preparing to approve the Bill on October 29, has ended the Israeli maneuver for now.

It was Netanyahu's office that postponed the Bill again, in fear of upsetting the special relationship he has managed to espouse under the Trump presidency.

So, at least for now, Israel will resume its 'creeping annexation' tactics, paying no heed to international protests and oblivious to the injustice inflicted on Palestinians. But of course the battle in the Israeli Knesset is not over, and more aggressive efforts at driving Palestinians out, while slowly annexing their land, are likely to follow.


Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and editor of the Palestine Chronicle. His forthcoming book is ‘The Last Earth: A Palestinian Story’ (Pluto Press, London). Baroud has a Ph.D. in Palestine Studies from the University of Exeter and is a Non-Resident Scholar at Orfalea Center for Global and International Studies, University of California Santa Barbara.


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