June 5, 2009 Friday
Updated

June 5, 2009
Israel: No policy change
JERUSALEM - ISRAEL will not heed President Barack Obama's powerful appeal to halt all settlement activity on lands the Palestinians claim for a future state, officials said on Friday, a position that looks sure to cause a policy clash with its most powerful ally.

The government plans to allow construction inside existing West Bank settlements to accommodate for growing families, said the officials.

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In an address to the Muslim world in Cairo on Thursday, Mr Obama said the United States does not recognise the legitimacy of the settlements and called on Israel to halt construction there. He also appealed to the Palestinians to renounce violence.

During a visit to Germany on Friday, the US leader renewed his call for Israel to halt settlement activity in the West Bank, saying that he recognised the politics involved in Israel that made it difficult to accomplish this task. He also pressed his call for the creation of an independent Palestinian state, saying: 'The moment is now for us to act.'

Both positions are in conflict with Israel's new leader, Benjamin Netanyahu, who refuses to endorse Palestinian statehood or accept a settlement freeze.

Israel issued a carefully worded response hours after Mr Obama's Cairo speech saying it hoped his words would help usher in a 'new period of reconciliation' in the Middle East. The response left out any reference to settlements or other issues that are putting Israel at odds with Washington.

The government officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to go beyond the formal response, said that instead of halting all settlement activity, Israel planned to take down 22 unauthorized settlement outposts in the West Bank in the coming weeks.

That balancing act - taking down outposts while pressing ahead with so-called 'natural growth' construction in the settlements - is not likely to go over well in Washington. US officials have made it clear they want all settlement activity to stop, without exception.

Most likely, Mr Netanyahu will be forced to choose between going along with Mr Obama's Mideast vision, and risk a crisis in his rightist governing coalition, or rejecting it, and risk alienating Israel's most important ally.

'Benjamin Netanyahu will have to come to a decision soon. It's either 'yes' to Obama or 'no' to Obama,' wrote columnist Ben Caspit in the Israeli daily Maariv on Friday. -- AP

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