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Americans Insist No Deal Made on Settlement Growth
By Glenn Kessler -Washington
Post
A letter that President
Bush personally delivered to then-Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon four years ago has emerged as a significant obstacle to the
president's efforts to forge a peace deal between the Israelis and Palestinians
during his last year in office.
Ehud
Olmert, the current Israeli prime minister, said this week that Bush's
letter gave the Jewish state permission to expand the West Bank settlements
that it hopes to retain in a final peace deal, even though Bush's peace plan
officially calls for a freeze of Israeli settlements across Palestinian
territories on the West Bank. In an interview
this week, Sharon's chief of staff, Dov
Weissglas, said Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice reaffirmed this understanding in a secret agreement reached between Israel
and the United States in the
spring of 2005, just before Israel
withdrew from Gaza.
U.S. officials say no
such agreement exists, and in recent months Rice has publicly criticized even
settlement expansion on the outskirts of Jerusalem,
which Israel
does not officially count as settlements. But as peace negotiations have
stepped up in recent months, so has the pace of settlement construction,
infuriating Palestinian officials, and Washington
has taken no punitive action against Israel for its settlement efforts.
Israeli officials say they have clear guidance from Bush administration
officials to continue building settlements, as long as it meets carefully
negotiated criteria, even though those understandings appear to contradict U.S. policy.
Many experts say new settlement construction undermines the political
standing of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud
Abbas -- who is to meet with Bush today at the White
House -- and adds to Palestinian cynicism about the peace process.
Palestinians view the settlements as an Israeli effort to claim Palestinian
lands, and in a meeting yesterday with Rice, Abbas said settlement construction
was "one of the greatest obstacles" to a peace deal.
U.S. and Israeli
officials privately argue that Israel
has greatly restricted settlement growth outside the settlements it hopes to
retain in a peace deal with the Palestinians, and Olmert has said Israel has
stopped building new settlements and confiscating Palestinian lands.
Housing starts -- not counting the Jerusalem
settlements -- have declined 33 percent since 2003, according to the Israeli
Central Bureau of Statistics. But officials say it is politically damaging for
Olmert to admit that, so instead he publicly emphasizes that he is adding to
the settlements, which now house about 450,000 Israelis.
"It was clear from day one to Abbas, Rice and Bush that construction
would continue in population concentrations -- the areas mentioned in Bush's
2004 letter," Olmert declared in an interview with the Israeli newspaper
Yedioth Ahronoth, published Sunday. "I say this again today: Beitar Illit
will be built, Gush Etzion will be built; there will be construction in Pisgat
Ze'ev and in the Jewish neighborhoods in Jerusalem,"
referring to new settlement expansion plans. "It's clear that these areas
will remain under Israeli control in any future settlement."
In a key sentence in Bush's 2004 letter, the president stated, "In
light of new realities on the ground, including already existing major Israeli
populations centers, it is unrealistic to expect that the outcome of final
status negotiations will be a full and complete return to the armistice lines
of 1949."
In a companion letter to "reconfirm" U.S.-Israeli understandings,
Weissglas wrote Rice that restrictions on the growth of settlements would be
made "within the agreed principles of settlement activities," which
would include "a better definition of the construction line of
settlements" on the West Bank. A joint
U.S.-Israeli team would "jointly define the construction line of each of
the settlements."
Weissglas said that the letter built upon a prior understanding between
then-Foreign Minister Shimon
Peres and then-Secretary
of State Colin L. Powell, which would allow Israel to build up settlements
within existing construction lines. But Powell denied that. "I never
agreed to it," he said in an e-mail.
Daniel Kurtzer, then the U.S.
ambassador to Israel,
said he argued at the time against accepting the Weissglas letter. "I
thought it was a really bad idea," he said. "It would legitimize the
settlements, and it gave them a blank check." In the end, Kurtzer said the
White House never followed up with the plan to define construction lines.
"Washington
lost interest in it when it became clear it would not be easy to do," he
said.
National security adviser Stephen
J. Hadley, at a news briefing in January, suggested that Bush's 2004 letter
was aimed at helping Sharon win domestic
approval for the Gaza
withdrawal. "The president obviously still stands by that letter of April
of 2004, but you need to look at it, obviously, in the context of which it was
issued," he said.
Weissglas said that in 2005, when Sharon was
poised to remove settlers from Gaza, the Bush
administration made a secret agreement -- not disclosed to the Palestinians --
that Israel
could add homes in settlements it expected to keep, as long as the construction
was dictated by market demand, not subsidies. He said the agreement was
necessary because Sharon needed the support of
municipal leaders in the main West Bank
settlements. The settlement leaders, he said, focused on the "inner
contradiction" of Bush's letter, mainly that it made no sense to have a
settlement freeze in places that Bush said would become part of Israel.
Weissglas said he then negotiated a "verbal understanding" with
deputy national security adviser Elliott
Abrams that would permit new construction in those key settlements; Rice
and Sharon then approved the Weissglas-Abrams deal. "I do not recall that
we had any kind of written formulation," Weissglas said.
"There is no understanding," said White
House National Security Council spokesman Gordon
Johndroe.
Indeed, as settlement starts soared after the Middle East peace conference
in Annapolis in November, Rice said "the United States
doesn't make a distinction" among settlement locations.
Powell said that in 2004, he did not anticipate that Bush's letter would be
perceived as a green light by Israel
for adding to the settlements. "I consistently spoke against settlement
growth, but as you know all I could do is talk against it," Powell said.
"There would be no consequences and there still aren't."
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