US eases view of Israel's illegal W. Bank settlements

US eases view of Israel's illegal W. Bank settlements

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says settlements in occupied West Bank 'not illegal per se'

By Michael Hernandez

WASHINGTON (AA) - The U.S. on Monday changed its position on Israeli settlements built in the occupied West Bank, breaking with precedent dating back over four decades.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced the move away from the State Department's 1978 legal opinion, which held that settlements are "inconsistent with international law.”

Pompeo said the opinion does not further the peace process, maintaining that Washington will no longer take a position on the settlements' legality, and that the establishment of Israeli settlements "is not per se inconsistent with international law."

"Calling the establishment of civilian settlements inconsistent with international law hasn't worked, it hasn't advanced the cause of peace," Pompeo said in remarks to reporters. "The hard truth is there will never be a judicial resolution to the conflict, and arguments about who is right and wrong as a matter of international law will not bring peace."

The Hansell Memorandum had been the foundation for the U.S. position on settlements in the occupied West Bank for over 40 years. It holds that Israel's settlements "appear to constitute a 'transfer of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies,'" maintaining their inconsistency with international law.

Pompeo said the new policy, which would pertain solely to the West Bank, would be that the U.S. has "no view" on the legal status of individual settlements, and the top diplomat said the U.S. would not prejudge the final status of the West Bank.

"This is for the Israelis and the Palestinians to negotiate," he said.

The move is highly likely to irk Palestinian officials who have rejected a role for the U.S. in any prospective peace talks with Israel over the Trump administration's 2017 decision to unilaterally recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital.

The U.S. under President Donald Trump has since gone on to close the Palestinians' diplomatic office in Washington, and has relocated its Israel embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

Israel occupied Jerusalem and the whole of the West Bank following the 1967 Six-Day War. Israel began establishing settlements in the West Bank the following year.

The Trump administration's decision to move away from the Hansell Memorandum will likely further distance it from allies in Europe.

The EU's top court ruled last week that products produced in the occupied territories must be marked as such.

The Palestinians want the West Bank -- along with the Gaza Strip -- for the establishment of a future Palestinian state.

The new policy will also further decrease the likelihood that Trump's long-promised peace plan will gain any traction when and if it is ever released.

International law views both the West Bank and East Jerusalem as occupied territories and considers all Israeli settlement-building activity there as illegal.

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