By Aaron Klein
JERUSALEM – The evacuation the past few days of five makeshift Jewish
communities in the West Bank was micromanaged behind the scenes by the
U.S. government, WND has learned.
Israeli police, backed by the Israel Defense Forces, clashed in recent
days with Jewish activists and West Bank Jewish residents while
destroying the five small outposts the government deemed illegal,
because construction was not coordinated with proper housing
authorities. The outposts, erected alongside existing legal West Bank
Jewish communities, were first built Sept. 30, during the Jewish Succot
holiday.
Israel strictly enforces regulations against Jewish building in the
West Bank while hundreds of thousands of illegal Palestinian outposts
have been constructed the past few years. That includes massive
apartment complexes and refugee camps on hundreds of acres of land in
Jerusalem owned by the Jewish National Fund, a Jewish nonprofit that
uses donor funds to purchase property for Jewish settlement.
Four of the five new makeshift West Bank Jewish communities were
evacuated by Israeli forces last week. Meanwhile, police are still
struggling to uproot the final outpost, named Shvut Ami, Hebrew for
"Return of My People." Activists and police authorities clashed
yesterday at the community, located near the Jewish town of Kedumim.
Israel National News reported the Israeli police brutalized several
Jewish activists while attempting to evacuate the small community.
Orit Struk, a spokesman for Israel's Yesha Civil Rights Organization,
said two teens were brutally beaten during an interrogation inside a
police station. The teens had been arrested for resisting orders to
leave the Shvut Ami community.
Palestinian and Israeli diplomatic sources speaking to WND today said
the evacuation of the five West Bank communities was heavily
micromanaged by officers of the U.S. consulate in Jerusalem.
One Palestinian official said that at one point last week, Palestinian
Authority officials were calling into the U.S. consulate several times
per hour to report on the Israeli evacuation.
"We don't credit [Prime Minister Ehud] Olmert for destroying these
illegal outposts. This was done under the strict orders of the U.S.
government," said a Palestinian official involved in
Israeli-Palestinian negotiations.
The reported U.S. management comes as Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice is in the region to prepare for an Israeli-Palestinian summit next
month in which Israel is expected to outline a future Palestinian state
in most of the West Bank and sections of Jerusalem.
Rice yesterday stated at a press conference outside the compound of
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas that the U.S. was deeply
invested in an agreement between Israel and the Palestinians.
"The United States sees the establishment of a Palestinian state and a
two-state solution as absolutely essential for the future, not just of
Palestinians and Israelis but also for the Middle East and indeed to
American interests," Rice said.
"That's really a message that I think only I can deliver," she added.
Yesterday, WND quoted Palestinian officials stating Rice told them she
would pressure Israel against initiating any Jewish construction in
eastern sections of Jerusalem.
A senior Palestinian negotiator stated Rice singled out Jerusalem areas
as becoming part of a future Palestinian state and told his negotiating
team she would publicly blame Israel for the failure of next month's
U.S.-sponsored summit in Maryland if the Jewish state didn't agree to
evacuate eastern Jerusalem neighborhoods.
Rice's comment were followed by an Olmert speech in which the Israeli
prime minister hinted he would withdraw from parts of Jerusalem by
asking whether it was "necessary" to retain certain Arab communities.
"Was it necessary to also add the Shuafat refugee camp, Sawakra, Walaje
and other villages and define them as part of Jerusalem? On that, I
must confess, I am not convinced," stated Olmert, speaking at a special
Knesset session to mark the sixth anniversary of the assassination of
former government minister Rehavam Ze'evi, who drew up the 1967 map.
Vice Premier Haim Ramon, a member of Olmert's ruling Kadima party, last
week reportedly mapped out a future partition of Jerusalem under a deal
with the Palestinians.
Original
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