Illegal Israeli Settlement Construction Causing the 
		Slow Demise of the Two-State Solution, EU Report
		Tuesday January 17, 2012 13:02 by William Gibson - IMEMC & Agencies
		A tour of several European Capitals by the Palestinian President has 
		given several politicians a sterner voice, at a time when the two-state 
		solution is steadily slipping through the fingers of the world leaders, 
		and will soon be out of reach completely; at least through the medium of 
		negotiations and peace. There is always war of course, which must be 
		avoided at all costs.
Palestinian President, Mahmoud Abbas, is on 
		day two of a four-day European tour to London, Berlin, and Moscow. 
		Yesterday he met with the British Prime Minister, David Cameron; Foreign 
		Secretary, William Hague; and Nick Clegg, the leader of the Liberal 
		Democrat Party and Deputy Prime Minister. 
On Tuesday, January 
		17, he is expected to meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and on 
		Thursday he will meet with Russian President, Dmitri Medvedev. The 
		meetings are to discuss the exploratory talks between Israeli and 
		Palestinian negotiators currently underway in Amman. 
Mr. Cameron 
		warned that the "Road Map" to peace may not prove sustainable if the 
		deadlock in the negotiations continue. After meeting with President 
		Abbas, the British Premier stated that "We think that time, in some 
		ways, is running out for the two-state solution, unless we can push 
		forward now, because otherwise the facts on the ground will make it more 
		and more difficult, which is why the settlement issue remains so 
		important."
Earlier in the day, his deputy launched a strongly 
		worded attack, voicing his concerns regarding the construction of 
		settlements within the West Bank and East Jerusalem, which are illegal 
		under international law. He claimed that Israel was carrying out 
		“deliberate vandalism” by continuing with its settlement projects. 
		
Standing next to President Abbas, Clegg stated that "Once you've 
		placed physical facts on the ground that makes it impossible to deliver 
		something that everyone has for years agreed is the ultimate 
		destination... it is an act of deliberate vandalism to the basic premise 
		on which negotiations have taken place for years and years and years.”
		
Israeli Foreign Ministry Spokesperson, Yigal Palmor, disagreed with 
		Nick Cleggs choice of language, and affirmed that “"It would be much 
		better to contribute to peace by encouraging the fragile revival of 
		Israeli-Palestinian talks rather than engaging in gratuitous bashing.”
		
This is not the first time European countries have suffered 
		criticism from Israel after voicing concerns regarding Israeli policies. 
		At the end of 2011, Israeli strongly rebuked several European states, 
		including Great Britain, France, Germeny, and Portugal, who spoke out at 
		the United Nations Security Council, condemning the announcement by the 
		Israeli government of new settlement projects. 
An Israeli 
		Foreign ministry official responded with the suggestion that should the 
		European powers not focus on the larger problems in the Middle East, 
		such as violence in Syria and Iran’s nuclear programme, then they “"are 
		bound to lose their credibility and make themselves irrelevant." This 
		forced the Israeli government to rebuke the Foreign Ministry for 
		speaking out of turn, and labeling many European powers (who Israel 
		relies upon as allies) as “irrelevant”.
An 
		internal European report released earlier this year strongly 
		urges Israel to alter its stance towards Area C, the section of the West 
		Bank amounting to approximately 59% of the land. The report states that
		Israeli actions, such as house 
		demolitions, settlement construction and 
		its relentless bureaucratic security measures, undermines the area with 
		a majority Palestinian population, and will 
		result in the “closing [of] the window” for reaching a two-state 
		solution. 
The West Bank is divided in 
		three zones, Area’s A, B and C. Area’s A and B fall under varying 
		Palestinian control, from security and civil administration and 
		services, with Area C comprising full Israeli military and civil 
		control.
British daily newspaper, The Independent, stated that 
		“If current trends are not stopped and reversed, the establishment of a 
		viable Palestinian state, within pre-1967 borders, seem[s] more remote 
		than ever.”
Despite claims by the Office of the Israeli Prime 
		Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, that their government has exercised great 
		restraint, Israeli group Peace Now claims that settlement construction 
		soared in 2011, and that the government broke its previous record for 
		settlement construction.
The report, published last week, claims 
		that there has been a twenty percent rise in construction starts in West 
		Bank settlements, after they began work on 1,850 new housing units, and 
		continued building on another 3,500 West Bank units during 2011. Israel 
		also approved the construction of 3,690 homes in East Jerusalem. 
		
The Palestinians want East Jerusalem as part of a future Palestinian 
		state, since the area lies within the Green Line, but after Israeli 
		captured the entire city during the Six Day War in 1967, they annexed 
		the city, and in 1980 the Israeli Knesset declared Jerusalem to be the 
		eternal and undivided capital of Israel. 
      
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