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Will U.S. push Israel to concede biblical heartland? Options



Pastor Dale Morgan View profile
More options Nov 24, 7:34 am

From: Pastor Dale Morgan <dgrmor...@telus.net>
Date: Mon, 24 Nov 2008 04:34:24 -0800
Local: Mon, Nov 24 2008 7:34 am




Subject: Will U.S. push Israel to concede biblical heartland?
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*Perilous Times

Will U.S. push Israel to concede biblical heartland?*


Palestinians seek sanctions preventing Jewish construction in historic,
holy cities


Posted: November 23, 2008
News from Israel


West Bank, including cities of Nablus, Jericho, Hebron and Bethel


JAFFA, Israel – The Palestinian Authority has asked the U.S. to impose
sanctions on Israel if the Jewish state continues building any new
housing structures in the strategic and historic West Bank, a top PA
source told WND.


The source, who works from PA President Mahmoud Abbas' office, said the
threat of sanctions would be part a series of Israeli-Palestinian
understandings to be guaranteed by the U.S. that both sides are trying
to reach before January.


The understandings, the source said, would result in an eventual Israeli
withdrawal from the vast majority of the West Bank, an area rich in
biblical history and significance.


Last week, informed Israeli and Palestinian sources told WND that
despite media reports painting a dismal picture of negotiation
prospects, Israel and the PA are still quietly working to conclude a
major agreement before President Bush leaves office at the end of the year.


Aside from a major West Bank withdrawal, the agreement would also grant
the PA permission to open official institutions in Jerusalem but would
postpone talks on the future status of the capital city until new
Israeli and U.S. governments are installed next year.


A top source said the PA requested that as part of the understandings,
the U.S. would threaten sanctions for any new Jewish construction in the
West Bank.


Israel recaptured the West Bank in the 1967 Six Day War. The territory,
in which about 200,000 Jews live, is tied to Judaism throughout the
Torah and is often referred to as the biblical heartland of Israel.


The book of Genesis says Abraham entered Israel at the West Bank city of
Shechem (Nablus) and received God's promise of land for his offspring.


He was later buried with the rest of the biblical patriarchs and
matriarchs, except for Rachel, in Hebron's Tomb of the Patriarchs. The
West Bank's Hebron was site of the first Jewish capital.


The nearby West Bank town of Beit El – anciently called Bethel, meaning
"house of God" – is where Scripture says the patriarch Jacob slept on a
stone pillow and dreamed of angels ascending and descending a stairway
to heaven. In that dream, God spoke directly to Jacob and reaffirmed the
promise of territory. Earlier, God had promised the land of Israel to
Abraham at Beit El. In Exodus, the holy tabernacle rested just north of
Beit El in Shiloh, believed to be the first area the ancient Israelites
settled after fleeing Egypt.


The understandings both sides are trying to reach before January are
part of an original plan initiated at last November's U.S.-sponsored
Annapolis summit, which sought to create a Palestinian state, at least
on paper, by January. The summit launched talks aimed at concluding a
final status agreement on all core issues: borders, the status of
Jerusalem and the future of so-called Palestinian refugees.


But a final agreement has been hampered by several recent events here,
most notably Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's decision to resign amid
corruption charges, leading to general elections scheduled for February
that will see a new prime minister elected.


The candidate for office from Olmert's Kadima party, Foreign Minister
Tzipi Livni, is said to oppose reaching a deal on Jerusalem or refugees
ahead of elections, fearing it will harm her prospects among
center-right voters. Livni is Olmert's chief negotiator with the
Palestinians.


In spite of the upcoming elections and the Israeli government's
subsequent political instability, teams of Israeli and Palestinian
negotiators have been quietly meeting regularly the past few weeks in
hope of concluding a series of understandings on key issues. Informed
sources said any understandings reached will be backed up by Bush in an
official letter. It is unclear how much weight such a letter will carry
under a new U.S. administration.


According to the sources, neither side expects to conclude any deal on
the status of Jerusalem or Palestinian "refugees" before January,
putting aside those issues for future talks. Instead, negotiations are
focused on reaching an agreement emphasizing borders, particularly a
pledged Israeli evacuation of the vast majority of the strategic West
Bank, which borders central Israeli population centers.


A Palestinian source told WND the U.S. is said to favor Israel
withdrawing from nearly the entire West Bank. The source said the U.S.
consulate in Jerusalem has been closely monitoring Israeli activities in
the territory, which the source said has led to the Jewish state
clamping down on what are termed "illegal outposts," or Jewish
structures built in the West Bank without government permission. Israel
has recently announced a series of small West Bank evacuations,
including the threatened forced removal of Jews who legally purchased a
house in the ancient city of Hebron.


Also being heavily negotiated is an agreement that would allow the PA to
officially open institutions in Jerusalem. WND previously reported the
PA already has been quietly operating in Jerusalem, apparently with
tacit approval from the Israeli government. But the expected agreement
to be concluded before January would give the PA official operational
status in the city, likely leading to the opening of scores of
Palestinian institutions there.


According to Israeli law, the PA cannot officially hold court in
Jerusalem. The PA previously maintained a de facto headquarters in
Jerusalem, called Orient House, but the building was closed down by
Israel in 2001 following a series of suicide bombings in Jerusalem.
Israel said it had information indicating the House was used to plan and
fund terrorism.


Thousands of documents and copies of bank certificates and checks
captured by Israel from Orient House – including many documents obtained
by WND – showed the offices were used to finance terrorism, including
direct payments to the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades terror group.


In parallel with an understanding on the West Bank and Jerusalem
institutions, the PA is pushing for a massive prisoner release to be
pledged before January. A senior Palestinian negotiator told WND the PA
requested that all Palestinian prisoners – meaning even convicted
terrorists responsible for murdering Israelis as well as members of the
rival Hamas terror group – be freed as part of the deal.


While the negotiator conceded such a massive release is unlikely, he
said the PA's hope is that Israel will grant a large release, possibly
including the freedom of convicted murderer Marwan Barghouti.


Barghouti is a founder of Fatah's Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades terror group,
the most active Palestinian terror organization. He has boasted of
planning the intifada, or Palestinian terror war, launched in September
2000, after then-PA President Yasser Arafat turned down an Israeli offer
of a Palestinian state and instead attempted to "liberate" Palestine by
force. Barghouti is serving five life sentences for his direct role in
murdering Israelis.


Other understandings that Israel and the PA are attempting to reach
before January surround water and natural resources.


While it wasn't clear whether any understanding would actually be
reached, the timing apparently favors all involved leaders.


With Bush set to depart office in January, sealing a deal between Israel
and the Palestinians would bode well for his legacy, which some analysts
say is hampered by what is described as an unpopular war in Iraq, an
economic meltdown and a growing crisis with Russia.


Olmert is Israel's most unpopular prime minister. Tainted by corruption
charges and a heavily mismanaged war in Lebanon in 2006, Olmert would
also like to depart office with a deal in hand. There is also some
concern in Jerusalem that President-elect Barack Obama may push Israel
into further concessions during future negotiations, so some argue a
deal on key issues while Bush is in office may be in Israel's interests.


Further, PA President Mahmoud Abbas' term in office expires Jan. 10. His
future leadership is sure to be contested by Hamas and by some in
Fatah's young guard who want him to be replaced by Barghouti. Abbas'
ability to tout an agreement in which Israel is compelled to retreat
from the West Bank and release Palestinian prisoners could help his
fading street popularity.


Abbas is also said to be greatly concerned by the prospects of
February's Israeli elections resulting in opposition leader Benjamin
Netanyahu coming to power. Netanyahu has announced repeatedly, including
as recently as last week, he would suspend negotiations with the PA.




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