Photo Credit: flash90
Judea and Samaria youth protest near Bet El, 2011

Following the Palestinians’ unilateral bid for statehood at the United Nations, many expect the Israeli government to announce their own large scale unilateral move. The Oslo Accords, signed between the Palestinian delegation and Israel in 1993, allow one side to respond with their own unilateral action if the other side decides engage in one first.

MK Yaakov “Katzeleh” Katz (National Union) is not waiting for the Israeli government to propose their own unilateral endeavor and has submitted to the Knesset a new piece of legislation that would allow Israel to annex the portion of Judea and Samaria known as Area C from the Oslo 2 agreement, signed in 1995.

Advertisement




Approximately 350,000 Israeli citizens live in Area C, a portion of Judea and Samaria which is currently under Israeli military control. The Israeli citizens who live in Area C currently do not enjoy the same legal status and rights that they would receive if the area was annexed. There are also between 56,000 and 150,000 Arabs living in Area C. Knesset Diaspora Affairs Committee Chairman MK Danny Danon (Likud) and Knesset House Committee Chairman Yariv Levin (Likud) have signed on as co-sponsors of Katzeleh’s bill.

Outside of the Knesset, Pinchas Polonsky is leading a new peace initiative involving the annexation of Area C which will target American politicians. The plan calls for promoting the strategy to Republican congressman and presidential candidates and would lead to a speech at the Republican National Convention in August. There are now more than a dozen Congressmen who have signed on to the objective.

The new initiatives come on the heels of the European Union’s plan to invest in infrastructure in the Arab areas of Area C. According to the E.U.’s numbers only 5.8% of Judea and Samaria’s Arabs live in Area C, which comprises 62% of Judea and Samaria.

The likely outcomes of the current attempts to annex Area C are not favorable, but it does signal the beginnings of a debate on the Israeli side about alternative unilateral moves.

Advertisement

SHARE
Previous articleUN Security Council Invites Humanitarian Chief to Speak on Israel
Next articleUS Congresswoman Urges Jordan to Appoint Ambassador to Israel
Jeremy Saltan is a frequent guest on various radio programs and and a veteran political analyst. He has run political campaigns in English and Hebrew for Israeli municipality, party institution, primary and general elections. Jeremy’s opinion pieces have been published, quoted or credited by Voice of America, Daily Beast, France 24, Washington Post, BBC, Al Jazeera, Foreign Policy, Jerusalem Post, Times of Israel, Israel National News and the Jewish Press and more.