Who’s funding illegal Palestinian settlements in Area C? (Part I)

Why is Israel allowing this to happen?

By Edwin Black, INN

The current rapid illegal build-up is funded by hundreds of millions of euros annually, funneled by the European Union and individual European nations into scores of building and infrastructure projects.

Area C,” which comprises some 60 percent of the ‘West Bank’, also known as Judea and Samaria, is making news these days. This time, the hot button issue is illegal Palestinian settlements sprouting across the region, shredding the last vestige of the Oslo Accords, which, for a generation, propelled the “two-state solution.”

Most observers of the Israeli-Palestinian crisis are accustomed to hearing talk of “illegal Jewish settlements” on slivers of land comprising one to two percent of the ‘West Bank’, mostly near the green line of Israel proper. But, attention now focuses on an explosion of thousands of illegal Palestinian Arab constructions: village clusters, agricultural tracts, water networks, roads, and general infrastructure crisscrossing Area C of the ‘West Bank’.

All of this violates the 1993 and 1995Oslo Accords, which specify full Israeli administrative control in Area C. Under the international agreement, only the Israeli Civil Administration can authorize new construction in the zone—for Israeli and Arab alike. However, continuous waves of recent Palestinian Arabv settlements are being established without permits—often without even bothering to apply. One senior official of the Israeli security apparatus called it “the wild west.”

According to Israeli activist watchdog groups, such as Regavim, in the past half-decade, illegal Palestinian settlements and infrastructure have sprawled across more than 9,000 dunams in more than 250 Area C locations, supported by more than 600 kilometers of illegally constructed access roads and more than 112,000 meters of retaining walls and terracing. This massive works project is being conducted in broad daylight, often heralded by tall announcement placards and proud press releases.

When questioned, various Israeli government officials did not dispute the Regavim numbers. In exasperation, one military spokesman close to the Area C files located at Bet El estimated “close to 10,000” illegal construction efforts are now underway—adding they felt “powerless to stop them.” The rapid illegal build-up is funded by hundreds of millions of euros annually, funneled by the European Union and individual European nations into scores of building and infrastructure projects.

Understanding the tortuous history that created the current sovereignty vacuum in Area C can be daunting and confusing.

Leaving out 99 percent of everything …

  • The indigenous Israelites of Canaan were expelled starting in 70 C.E. by the Romans, who renamed the region “Syria-Palaestina”—or Palestine, for the Philistine sea invaders from the Greek Islands.
  • In about 637 C.E., the Islamic invasion swept up from the Arabian Peninsula to conquer and convert.
  • For about four centuries, the Turkish Ottoman Empire governed until its 1918 defeat in World War I.
  • After WWI, the Allies dismembered Ottoman colonies throughout the Middle East and concomitantly encouraged self-determination for ethnic peoples across the Levant.

The League of Nations, in association with 51 countries and competing nationalist groups, eventually established five modern Arab countries: Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, modern Hejaz (Arabia) and post-colonial modern Egypt, plus one democratic and pluralistic Jewish State in Palestine. The original 1920 “Mandate” boundaries of the modern Jewish State extended from the Mediterranean Sea across the area now known as Jordan—a country which then did not exist.

The Arabs were shortchanged by the French in their quest for an Arab Kingdom in Syria. So, in recompense, the British modified the Palestine Mandate in September 1922 by virtue of an official memorandum, carving off some 70 percent of the intended Jewish nation to invent Trans-Jordan (now Jordan)—the territory extended from the Jordan River east to the borders of Iraq and what is now Saudi Arabia.

For decades, co-existence between Arabs and Jews in the former Turkish colony could not be achieved. In 1947, the non-binding UN Resolution 181—known as Partition—recommended side-by-side Jewish and Arab states. In those days, the identity of the two peoples was “Arab” and “Jewish,” as local Arabs did not adopt the identity of “Palestinian” until about 1964.

Israel accepted Partition, but the Arabs refused. The surrounding League-created Arab nations attacked the newly declared Jewish State. In 1948, Jordan (created by the British memo) illegally invaded and annexed the area west of the Jordan River, including East Jerusalem, thus coining the new term, “West Bank” for the still-disputed former Turkish colonial provinces.

In 1967, when Israel fought its preemptive Six Day War, expelling Jordan, the Jewish State reoccupied this same disputed former Turkish colonial region, still called the ‘West Bank’. In 1988, Jordan rescinded any claim of sovereignty, deepening the sovereignty vacuum.

In 1993 and 1995, after years of diplomatic wrangling, Israel and the avowed terror group Palestine Liberation Organization signed the Oslo Accords, envisioning a peaceful two-state solution. Under the complex Oslo Accords, and subsequent modifications at Wye, Sharm el-Sheikh, and elsewhere, the “West Bank” is divided into three separate administrative zones, Areas A, B and C.

Area A is reserved for Palestinian civil and administrative control and seats the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah. Area B is governed by Palestinian civil control under a joint Israeli-Palestinian security apparatus.

Area C —also called Judea and Samaria—comprises roughly 60 percent of the ‘West Bank’. It more closely resembles the Biblical and original international demarcation of a Jewish State during the initial League of Nations mandate—but is now considered occupied by the international community. The majority of Area C residents are Israelis—an estimated 325,000 alongside some 300,000 Arabs (some say 80,000). In essence, Oslo normalized and structured the Israeli occupation and administration of the disputed former Turkish lands.

But by virtue of a cumulative multibillion-euro effort, European capitals are working hard to destabilize the last pillars of the Oslo Accords. Thus, these countries seek to create a Palestinian state along the 1948 armistice line — also known as the 1967 lines— without further consulting the Jewish State. This ensures the Palestinian Authority knows it need not negotiate with Jerusalem—even as the United States and Gulf countries make a daring dash to achieve peace.

As the urgency of Area C is becoming clearer, still murky is the source of the diverse European funding that enables this conflict and the routes those billions of euros take across the Mediterranean. What’s more, there is widespread fear that millions in funds are continuously funneled through entities openly accused of being affiliated with established terrorist organizations.

Edwin Black is the award-winning New York Times bestselling author of IBM and the HolocaustFunding Hate, and the journalist who in Financing the Flamesdocumented the terrorist salaries now known as “Pay to Slay.”

August 18, 2019 | 5 Comments »

Leave a Reply

5 Comments / 5 Comments

  1. @ Bear Klein:

    Yemina is making a big deal about the illegal Arab housing.

    Even IF they actually do plan to confront this travesty AFTER the elections, during the next two and a half months until a coalition gov’t can (?) be formed- the mammoth amount of illegal building, land-grabs the “Palis” can make- can be catastrophic to Israel’s Sovereignty.

    The call of the hour is for:

    1) Major Public Education on this subject.

    2) Public Outcry and Protests

    3) Warn ALL the Politicians running for office- If you don’t do something NOW- Like demanding a High Court Order of Injunction and/or Civil Administration- IDF Protection AGAINST such actions- WE WILL VOTE WITH OUR FEET, and Then Some!

    But as in my previous post- WHO IS GOING TO TAKE THE INITIATIVE to LEAD THIS EFFORT?!

  2. Yemina is making a big deal about the illegal Arab housing. Bibi’s leadership is reactive not proactive.

    Regavim has documented the problem. Now a concrete plan is required to destroy Illegal Arab housing, declare sovereignty of Area C. This is vital to the future of Israel.

  3. @ Edgar G.:

    I can only assume that israpundit readers and posters don’t care.

    Ed, Calm Down!

    OF COURSE WE CARE– But like most, we DON’T KNOW WHAT TO DO about all this tyranny.

    What’s NEEDED is not only commendable organizations-NGOs like Gagavim. But ALSO, COMMUNITY EDUCATION AND ACTIVISM.

    Then MAYBE, an educated public, especially if they are made abundantly aware that all of this illegal building may SOON THREATEN THEIR OWN COMFORTABLE EXISTENCE, may likely GET OFF THEIR BUTS AND DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!

  4. @ Dean M Blake:

    About two years back, maybe a little less or more, Bennett brought up the project of immediately annexing, or establishing Israeli Law (not sure which -or both) in Area C, virtually making it Israeli territory. At that time he estimated that there were about 10,000 Arabs there, -who could be given citizenship.

    Since then, every time there is any mention in some depth of Area C, the numbers of Arabs illegally there, expand exponentially. Their prefab structures actually bear EU logos. And all the damned Israeli fools need to do is to marshal about 5-6 bulldozers, give 24 hours notice to the Arabs, most of whose “villages” are ramshackle and of obviously hurried and temporary nature, and then methodically go from place to place, pushing down everything standing, and then returning the shattered remains of the EU prefabs to Europe, consigned F.O.B.

    Alternately, confiscate the usable structures and hand them to the various /Jewish groups who want to settle the area.

    Whichever way they chose, since the Arabs are there illegally. as well as their structures, they have no comeback, except by fake outrage and protests.

    Israeli bureaucracy, congenitally lazy in true oriental fashion, will never get there without some organised group taking the lead.

    I have posted on this subject many times, each time asking how is it that large -either the parts, or already pre-assembled- prefabs are allowed to come into the country, with no one asking where they came from and how they got there…..To move either parts or fully assembled buildings require very large trucks with extra wide beds, and also assurance that the roads are wide enough to allow them to pass.

    I’ve never had a single answer, speculative or otherwise. I can only assume that israpundit readers and posters don’t care.

  5. it’s up to the Israelis to decide whether investment in the land is better or more Arabs are better. It takes very little action to stop the significance of these Investments by simply cutting off the water to unlawful buildings or plowing up portions of Roads. The time to act is ASAP or the opportunity and land will be lost.