Jennifer Loewenstein Archive


 

EXCERPT: The Israeli newspaper Haaretz found in an investigative report they conducted last month that Israel spends about $550 million alone for the non-military aspects of settlement maintenance and expansion. The Israeli Knesset, meanwhile, estimates that Israel will spend about $3.4 billion on the separation wall, 80% of which is to run inside the occupied West Bank.
 
 
Rights group urges US to cut Israel aid
By Laila El-Haddad in Gaza
 
Tuesday 03 January 2006,
 
A prominent US human rights organisation has called on
the Bush administration to cut back its direct foreign
aid to Israel until the latter complies with calls to
stop settlement expansion and work on the separation
wall.
 
In a letter addressed to George Bush, the US
president, the New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW)
requested that the US administration deduct direct aid
to Israel the amount equal to what Israel spends on
its the settlements and on the construction and
maintenance of the separation wall inside the West
Bank.
 
The HRW letter cites figures from the Israeli Central
Bureau of Statistics that in the first half of 2005,
there was a 28% increase in settlement housing starts
compared to the same period in 2004.
 
According to the Israeli settlement watchdog group
Peace Now, there are 121 official settlements in
Israel and 101 unofficial outposts.
 
The settlement areas occupy more than 40% of the West
Bank. There are 240,000 settlers residing in the
settlements amid some 2.5 million Palestinians in the
West Bank.
 
"Israel's continuing settlement activity is a
violation of international humanitarian law, United
Nations Security Council resolutions, and Israel's own
commitments under the US-sponsored road map of April
2003"
 
"We urge you to use US diplomatic and financial
influence to stop this trend in 2006," read the
letter, signed by Sarah Leah Whitson, executive
director of HRW's Middle East North Africa Division.
 
"Israel's continuing settlement activity is a
violation of international humanitarian law, United
Nations Security Council resolutions, and Israel's own
commitments under the US-sponsored road map of April
2003," it continued.
 
Largest aid recipient
 
Israel has been the largest annual recipient of US
foreign assistance since 1976, and the largest
cumulative recipient since World War II, according to
a report published by the Congressional Research
Service (CRS) in Washington DC.
 
US direct aid to Israel was nearly $2.6 billion in
2005, with an additional $3 billion provided by way of
loan guarantees.
 
It is not known exactly what amount of that money is
spent on settlements and their expansion or on
constructing and maintaining the wall.
 
Unlike other recipients of US aid, Israel is not
required to report on how it spends any of the money
it receives from the US, nor is it required to pay
back the loans, according to the CRS report.
 
The Israeli newspaper Haaretz found in an
investigative report they conducted last month that
Israel spends about $550 million alone for the
non-military aspects of settlement maintenance and
expansion.
 
The Israeli Knesset, meanwhile, estimates that Israel
will spend about $3.4 billion on the separation wall,
80% of which is to run inside the occupied West Bank.
 
Israeli denial
 
The Israeli Foreign Ministry denies the money spent on
settlements comes from US financial aid, a practice
that would be in contravention of US stipulations.
 
Lior Ben Dor, a spokesperson for the ministry, said:
"We know how to run our budget. The construction of a
new apartment or housing in these existing settlements
does not necessarily mean that the money for it is
taken from this foreign aid.
 
"Sometimes it comes from private enterprises. But in
any case it doesn't have to do directly or necessarily
with foreign aid.
 
"Israel is not building any new settlements. Any
expansion is taking place according to the natural
growth of the population and within building plans for
these settlements.
 
"So therefore we see no need to cut American aid," Ben
Dor told Aljazeera.net, adding that Israel was "ready
to dismantle" a number of West Bank settlements based
on "progress" in the road map.
 
Circumvention
 
Under the US sponsored road map peace plan, Israel
agreed to freeze all settlement activity, including
"natural growth", and to dismantle all settlement
outposts created since March 2001, according to Human
Rights Watch.
 
Groups such as Peace Now believe the Israeli
administration circumvents its promise not to build
new settlements by expanding existing ones beyond
their natural growth, by annexing Palestinian land,
and by creating a system of contiguous illegal
outposts.
 
It is the first time a major human-rights group has
asked for an actual cut in direct aid to Israel, as
opposed to a reduction in loan guarantees or other
grants, according to Lucy Mair, head of HRW's
Jerusalem office.
 
Washington has previously halted loan guarantees to
Israel -most recently in 2003 - but never direct
foreign aid.
 
Stopping loan guarantees means that Israel has to pay
slightly higher interest on money it may or may not
borrow. Cutting aid would have more severe
implications.
 
"The US has reiterated many times its position that
Israel should freeze all settlement building,
including natural growth, but it needs to put its
money where its mouth is because Israel is clearly
thumbing its nose at US requests," Mair told
Aljazeera.net.
 
Stepping out
 
Human-rights organisations often shy away from openly
calling for a cut in foreign aid to Israel, for fear
it may jeopardise their standing with donors.
 
Stephen Zunes, professor of politics at the University
of San Francisco in California, explains: "It is an
important step in that it underscores the need for the
US government to do something concrete to back up its
stated commitment to the provisions of the road map.
 
"Having a mainstream and reputable human-rights
organisation directly address the sensitive topic of
US aid to Israel helps move the settlements issue away
from divisive ideological debates and places it
squarely on the human-rights agenda where it belongs.
 
"It will force American politicians to choose between
defending the human rights community and backing a
right-wing expansionist government in its blatant
violations of international law," Zunes said.
 
Attempts to get a response from US officials in Israel
and at the State Department were unsuccessful.
 
Mair said HRW does not expect to receive a response,
but are "confident" that the administration
individuals concerned are reading their interventions.
 
"As the largest bilateral donor to Israel, the US has
a special responsibility to make sure that its aid is
not directly or indirectly used to support violations
of international humanitarian law such as settlement
building or the construction of the wall inside the
occupied Palestinian territories," she said.
 
 
 
 
 
Jennifer Loewenstein