US and Israeli leaders Announce Major Policy Changes at Kohelet Policy Forum Conference
US Ambassador to Israel, David
Friedman speaks at the Kohelet Forum Conference, at the Begin Heritage
Center, in Jerusalem, on January 8, 2020. (JNS) It’s not often that the public hears major announcements from
leaders. So when a number of top American and Israeli political figures
appeared at last week’s Kohelet Policy Forum in Jerusalem, it was clear
they had something important to share. The conference focused on the
aptly named “Pompeo Doctrine,” a statement by the Trump administration
in November that Israel’s settlement enterprise is not illegal under
international law.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, speaking
in a recorded address, opened the conference by announcing that the
United States is “disavowing” the 1978 Hansell Memorandum, a State
Department memo that claimed Israeli settlements violate international
law.
This was the first major development announced at the conference.
Pompeo
said, “We’re recognizing that these settlements don’t inherently
violate international law. That is important. We’re disavowing the
deeply flawed 1978 Hansell memo, and we’re returning to a balanced and
sober Reagan-era approach.”
U.S. Ambassador to Israel David
Friedman spoke at the conference and confirmed that U.S. policy also
states that “Israelis, Jews have the right to live in Judea and
Samaria.”
He highlighted the three major long-standing issues that
the Trump administration has changed. First, the U.S. officially
recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and moved its embassy
there. Second, the United States recognized the Golan Heights as
sovereign Israeli territory. Third, the United States has now recognized
that Israeli communities in Judea and Samaria do not violate
international law.
Regarding the resolution of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict specifically in terms of Judea and Samaria,
Friedman said “the proverbial goal posts have moved and moved—to the
point today where they are no longer even on the field.”
Friedman
went on to say that “the Pompeo Doctrine does not resolve the conflict
over Judea and Samaria, but it does move the goalposts back onto the
field. It does not obfuscate the very real issue that two million or
more Palestinians reside in Judea and Samaria. … The Pompeo Doctrine
says clearly that Israelis have a right to live in Judea and Samaria.
But it doesn’t say the Palestinians don’t. Rather, it calls for a
practical negotiated resolution of the conflict that improves lives on
both sides.”
The second somewhat big announcement was by Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu when he repeated his previously
declared pledge that his government “will not allow the uprooting of any
community, Jewish or Arab, under any peace plan.”
“The principles
are simple,” he said. “Israel has and will continue to have security
control west of Jordan, Jerusalem will never be divided, and settlements
will not be uprooted.”
The third piece of interesting news was
announced by Israeli Defense Minister Naftali Bennett. He told the
conference that he is establishing a special task force to prevent
illegal Palestinian construction in Israeli-controlled areas of Judea
and Samaria, known as “Area C.”
Bennett also announced that he would work to develop and legalize unauthorized outposts throughout Judea and Samaria.
These
three important announcements are major and positive developments for
those who believe that Israel is on the right side of history.
Avi
Bell, an Israeli professor of law at the University of the San Diego
School of Law and at Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan, told JNS that
what Pompeo said was “very simple and obvious.”
“The real
question,” said Bell, “is why does he have to say it at all? It is a
wonderful act of courage for him to say that simple truth [that
settlements are not illegal according to international law]. Of course
they are not, per se, illegal!”
Eugene Kontorovich, director of
international law at the Kohelet Policy Forum, was deeply satisfied with
Pompeo’s declaration. “American policy is now clearer than ever; Jews
living in Judea and Samaria is not a crime,” he told JNS.
“For
decades, the obscure Carter-era memo was used as justification for
anti-Israel policies, despite the fact that its conclusions were
rejected by subsequent administrations,” he said. “Pompeo’s statement
makes clear the U.S.’s wholesale rejection of the legal theory that
holds that international law restricts Israeli Jews from moving into
areas from which Jordan had ethnically cleansed them in 1949.”
“The
notion that it is not a war crime for Jews to live in the areas of
Judea and Samaria is not rocket science. It is not an exotic position,”
he added.
Kontorovich noted that there are plenty of people who
argue that it’s impossible to present Israel’s side since the
international community has already made up its mind that settlements
are illegal, and that Judea and Samaria is not “disputed,” but rather
“occupied.”
“That treats our international and diplomatic rights
like a game show. If international law were a game of ‘Survivor,’ we
would have been voted off the island a long time ago,” he quipped. “But
it is not. There are principles, and those principles need to be
consistent across context, and they are demonstrable.”
“I hope
soon other countries will also follow the visionary leadership of
President Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo,” he said.
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