UK lawmakers urge Johnson to sanction Israel if West Bank annexation
goes ahead
130 signatories from both
major parties say Britain sanctioned Russia over Crimea grab, so any move by
Netanyahu must be met with the same response
Nearly 130
current and former British lawmakers wrote to UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson
and urged him to impose economic sanctions if Israel moves ahead with plans to
annex sections of the West Bank as part of a government coalition deal.
The letter states that the UK sanctioned Russia after it annexed the
Ukrainian territory of Crimea, and that therefore any annexation of the West
Bank should be met with a similar response, the Guardian reported on
Friday.
The letter was organized by the Council for Arab
British Understanding and signatories reportedly included the Conservative Party
chairman Chris Patten and the former international development secretary Andrew
Mitchell, as well as Labour’s Margaret Hodge.
Annexation would
be a “mortal blow to the chances of peace between Israelis and Palestinians
based on any viable two-state solution,” the letter stated, adding that they
believe the Israeli government is using “the cover of the Covid-19 pandemic to
seek to implement this egregious plan. It is vital that the UK does everything
in its power to prevent this.”
“Our government
has stated that any annexation ‘cannot go unchallenged. The government must now
make clear publicly to Israel that any annexation will have severe consequences
including sanctions. Words are not enough: Prime Minister Netanyahu has ignored
our words. We need to prevent his government from setting this alarmingly
dangerous precedent in international relations.”
US President
Donald Trump in January unveiled a peace plan to resolve the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Rejected by the Palestinians and condemned by
much of the international community, the plan gives Israel the green light to
annex Jewish settlements and other strategic territories in the West Bank.
An Israeli
coalition government agreement reached last week includes a framework for
implementing the annexations outlined in the plan, starting in July.
Under the US
proposal, the Palestinians would be granted a sovereign but demilitarized state
in the remaining parts of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, along with promises
of major investments.
The Palestinian
state’s capital would be on the outskirts of Jerusalem, which would remain
fully under Israeli sovereignty.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday that he was “confident”
Trump would let him fulfill his election promise to apply Israeli sovereignty
over parts of the West Bank “a couple of months from now.”
The Netanyahu’s
right-wing base is eager to move forward with annexation while the friendly
Trump administration is in office.
The
Netanyahu-Gantz deal stipulates that any Israeli action would need US backing,
and must take into account Israel’s peace treaties with neighboring Jordan and
Egypt, the only two Arab states that have formal peace treaties and diplomatic
relations with Israel.
Israel captured
the West Bank and East Jerusalem from Jordan during the 1967 Six-Day War. The
Palestinians seek those territories as part of a future independent state.
The Palestinians have refused to negotiate with the Trump
administration, considering it biased. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud
Abbas threatened last
week to cancel all agreements with Israel and the US if Israel moved forward
with annexation plans.
Amid reports intimating that the White House is conditioning its support
for Israeli annexation of parts of the West Bank on negotiations over a
Palestinian state, the administration stressed Friday
that it continues to back Israel’s annexation plans, as long as they’re carried
out in the framework of the peace plan Trump presented on January 28.
“Our position has not changed,” a spokesperson for the US Embassy in
Jerusalem told The
Times of Israel. “As we have made consistently clear, we are prepared to recognize
Israeli actions to extend Israeli sovereignty and the application of Israeli
law to areas of the West Bank that the [Trump peace plan] foresees as being
part of the State of Israel.”
Eleven European
ambassadors to Israel on Thursday warned Jerusalem of severe consequences if it
carried out annexation.
The envoys from
the UK, Germany, France, Ireland, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Sweden,
Belgium, Denmark, Finland, and the EU issued a formal objection to the Foreign
Ministry against the move, Channel 13 reported.
Also on Thursday, the Arab League said that the planned annexation
constituted a “new war crime”
against the Palestinians during a virtual conference chaired in Cairo.
The Arab League also urged the United States to
“withdraw its support in enabling the plans of the occupying Israeli
government.”
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