Pompeo visits Israeli settlement in 1st by top US diplomat
 
 
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has visited an
Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank, becoming the first top U.S.
diplomat to do so.
A State Department official, speaking on condition
of anonymity, confirmed the visit to reporters traveling with Pompeo, who were
not allowed to accompany him. He arrived at the Psagot winery outside Jerusalem
on Thursday.
Earlier, he said he would pay a visit to the Golan
Heights. Israel seized the West Bank and the Golan Heights in the 1967 war and
later annexed the Golan in a move not recognized internationally.
Israel has built dozens of settlements in the West
Bank, which the Palestinians want for their future state. Most of the
international community views the settlements a violation of international law
and an obstacle to peace.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Thursday that
the U.S. will regard the Palestinian-led boycott movement as “anti-Semitic” and
cut off government support for any organizations taking part in it, a step that
could deny funding to Palestinian and international human rights groups.
Pompeo announced the initiative during a visit to
Israel in which he is expected to make the first-ever appearance by a secretary
of state in an Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank. In another first,
Pompeo said he would visit the Golan Heights, which Israel seized from Syria in
the 1967 war and later annexed in a move not recognized internationally.
“We will regard the global, anti-Israel BDS campaign
as anti-Semitic,” Pompeo said, referring to the Boycott, Divestment and
Sanctions movement.
“We will immediately take steps to identify
organizations that engage in hateful BDS conduct and withdraw U.S. government
support for such groups,” he said, adding that all nations should “recognize
the BDS movement for the cancer that it is.”
BDS organizers cast their movement as a non-violent
way of protesting Israel’s policies toward the Palestinians modeled on the
campaign that helped end apartheid in South Africa. The movement has had some
limited success over the years but no impact on the Israeli economy.
Israel views BDS as an assault on its very
existence, and has seized on statements by some supporters to accuse it of
anti-Semitism, allegations denied by organizers.
In a statement, the BDS movement reiterated its
rejection of “all forms of racism, including anti-Jewish racism,” and accused
the U.S. and Israel of trying to silence advocacy for Palestinian rights.
“The BDS movement for Palestinian freedom, justice
and equality, stands with all those struggling for a more dignified, just and
beautiful world,” it said. “With our many partners, we shall resist these
McCarthyite attempts to intimidate and bully Palestinian, Israeli and
international human rights defenders into accepting Israeli apartheid and
settler-colonialism as fate.”
Pompeo did not provide additional details about the
initiative, and it was unclear what organizations would be at risk of losing
funding. Israelis have accused international groups like Human Rights Watch and
Amnesty International of supporting BDS, allegations they deny.
Human Rights Watch, whose researcher was deported
from Israel last year for past statements allegedly in support of BDS, does not
call for boycotting Israel but urges companies to avoid doing business in West
Bank settlements, saying it makes them complicit in human rights abuses.
Amnesty does not take a position on the boycott movement.
“The Trump administration is undermining the common
fight against the scourge of antisemitism by equating it with peaceful advocacy
of boycotts,” Eric Goldstein, acting Middle East and North Africa director at
Human Rights Watch, said in a statement.
Israel passed a 2017 law that bars entry to
foreigners who have called for economic boycotts of Israel or its settlements.
The U.S. House of Representatives passed a resolution opposing the boycott
movement last year, and several U.S. states have enacted anti-BDS laws.
Virtually all Palestinian organizations support the
boycott movement, but under President Donald Trump the U.S. has already cut off
nearly all forms of aid to the Palestinians. President-elect Joe Biden has
pledged to restore the aid as part of efforts to revive the peace process.
Pompeo spoke at a press conference with Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who said the Israel-U.S. alliance had
reached “unprecedented heights” under the Trump administration.
Netanyahu thanked the administration for moving its
embassy to contested Jerusalem, abandoning the U.S. position that Israeli
settlements are contrary to international law, recognizing Israel’s annexation
of the Golan Heights and taking a hard line against Iran.
Israel captured east Jerusalem and the West Bank in
the 1967 war. The Palestinians want both territories to be part of their future
state and view the settlements as a violation of international law and an
obstacle to peace — a position endorsed by most of the international community.
Trump’s Mideast plan, which overwhelmingly favored
Israel and was rejected by the Palestinians, would allow Israel to annex up to
a third of the West Bank, including all of its settlements there, which are
home to nearly 500,000 Israelis.
“For a long time, the State Department took the
wrong view of settlements,” Pompeo said, but it now recognizes that
“settlements can be done in a way that (is) lawful, appropriate and proper.”
Neither Netanyahu nor Pompeo said anything about the
U.S. election. Pompeo, like Trump, has yet to acknowledge President-elect Joe
Biden’s victory. Netanyahu congratulated Biden and referred to him as the
president-elect in an official statement earlier this week.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


