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Written by ETHAN BRONNER, NY Times ETHAN BRONNER, NY Times
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Category: News News
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Published: 03 June 2009 03 June 2009
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Last Updated: 05 June 2009 05 June 2009
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Created: 03 June 2009 03 June 2009
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He and others said that Israel agreed both to the roadmap and to move
ahead with the removal of settlements and soldiers from Gaza in 2005 on
the understanding that settlement growth could continue.
But a senior official in the Bush administration disagreed, calling the Israeli characterization “an overstatement.”
“There
was never an agreement to accept natural growth,” the official said
Tuesday, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the delicacy of
the matter. “There was an effort to explore what natural growth would
mean, but we weren’t able to reach agreement on that.”
The
official said that Bush administration officials were working with
their Israeli counterparts to clarify several issues, including natural
growth, government subsidies to settlers, and the cessation of
appropriation of Palestinian land. The United States and Israel never
reached an agreement though, either public or private, the official
said.
The Israeli officials acknowledged that the new American
administration had different ideas about the meaning of the term
“settlement freeze.” Both Mr. Obama and Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton have said in the past week that the term meant an end to
all building, including natural growth.
But they complained that
Mr. Obama had not granted that the previous understandings existed.
Instead, they lamented, Israel stood now accused of having cheated and
dissembled in its settlement activity whereas, in fact, it had largely
lived within the guidelines to which both governments had agreed.
On Monday, Mr. Netanyahu said Israel “cannot freeze life in the settlements,” calling the American demand “unreasonable.”
Dov
Weissglas, who was a senior aide to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, wrote
an opinion article for Yediot Aharonot, a mass-selling newspaper, on
Tuesday in which he laid out the agreements he said had been reached
with Bush officials.
He said that in May 2003 he and Mr. Sharon
met with Elliott Abrams and Stephen Hadley of the National Security
Council and came up with the definition of settlement freeze as “no new
communities were to be built; no Palestinian lands were to be
appropriated for settlement purposes; building will not take place
beyond the existing community outline; and no ‘settlement encouraging’
budgets were to be allocated.”
He said that Condoleezza Rice,
then the national security adviser, signed off on that definition later
that month and that the two governments also agreed to set up a joint
committee to define more fully the meaning of “existing community
outline” for existing settlements.
President Bush presented Mr.
Sharon in April 2004 with a letter stating, “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.” That, Mr. Weissglas said, was a result of his earlier
negotiations with Bush officials acknowledging that certain settlement
blocs would remain Israeli and open to continued growth.
The
Israeli officials said that no Bush official had ever publicly insisted
that Israel was obliged to stop all building in the areas it captured
in 1967. They said it was important to know that key verbal
understandings reached between an Israeli prime minister and an
American president would not simply be tossed aside when a new
administration came into office.
Mr. Abrams, the former Bush
official who was part of those negotiations, wrote his own opinion
article in The Washington Post and seemed to endorse the Israeli
argument. He wrote, “For the past five years, Israel’s government has
largely adhered to guidelines that were discussed with the United
States but never formally adopted: that there would be no new
settlements, no financial incentives for Israelis to move to
settlements and no new construction except in already built-up areas.
The clear purpose of the guidelines? To allow for settlement growth in
ways that minimized the impact on Palestinians.”
Mr. Abrams
acknowledged that even within those guidelines, Israel had not fully
complied. He wrote: “There has been physical expansion in some places,
and the Palestinian Authority is right to object to it. Israeli
settlement expansion beyond the security fence, in areas Israel will
ultimately evacuate, is a mistake.”
Helene Cooper contributed reporting from Washington.