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An
Israeli security guard observes the newly-built concrete wall
surrounding Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank
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WASHINGTON,
November 26 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Getting the
Israeli green light, the United States decided to deduct $289.5
million from a loan guarantee package to Israel for its sprawling
settlement activity in occupied Palestinian territories.
The
Israeli embassy said in a statement that the amount cut had been
"suggested" by Israel, which does not affect Washington's
direct aid for the Jewish state, the BBC News Online reported.
"Israel
understands that the U.S. should not finance directly, or indirectly,
activities with which it does not agree. Israel accepts that the
United States does not view some of the Israeli activities to date in
parts of Judea, Samaria and Gaza as being consistent with U.S.
policy," the Israeli embassy said in a statement.
Israel
"therefore suggested that the U.S. deduct the agreed sum of
$289.5 million from the 3 billion dollars in loan guarantees currently
available."
An
Israeli diplomat told Agence France-Presse (AFP) the decision was
taken Tuesday, November 25, following a meeting in Washington between
U.S. national security adviser Condoleezza Rice, and Dov Weisglass,
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's chief of staff.
White
House national security spokesman Sean McCormack said the United
States welcomed what he also characterized as Israel's
"suggestion" that the loan guarantees be reduced because of
the disagreements.
"This
suggestion acknowledges U.S. policy concerns and U.S. law regarding
activities in the West Bank and Gaza and is a reflection of close and
continuing consultations between our two governments," he told
AFP.
Both
Israel and the U.S. have stressed that despite the reduction, their
ties remain strong.
"Bush
has domestic political reasons to be cautious in how much pressure he
puts on the Israelis," commented the BBC's David Bamford in
Washington.
"His
father, George HW Bush, suspended Israel's loan guarantees for similar
reasons when he was president in 1991. But it created a political
storm in the U.S. that many believe contributed to his failure to win
a second term as president in the following year's election."
In
addition to the banking guarantees, Israel in 2003 got one billion
dollars from Washington following the war in Iraq, money that came on
top of the annual U.S. assistance of almost 3 billion dollars a year,
which includes 2.1 billion in military aid.
The
$289.5 million figure is the amount Washington has estimated will fund
building in the occupied territories -- including building parts of
Israel's separation wall, which cuts off vast swathes of Palestinian
farmland and runs deep inside the occupied West Bank.
A
U.N. report underlined last September that the separation wall marked illegal
annexation of Palestinian territory and must be condemned by
the world community.
Under
the terms of the internationally-backed 'roadmap' for Middle East,
Israel is obliged to dismantle all outposts and place a complete
freeze on settlement activity.
Insignificant
Furthermore,
an Israeli minister sought to play down Wednesday, November 26, the
significance of the U.S. decision.
"These
measures form part of our tacit understanding and should not worry
us," Absorption Minister Tsippe Livni told public radio.
"The
important thing for us is that the security fence (the separation
wall) will include a maximum number of our nationals," Livni
said.
During
a speech in London last week, U.S. President George W. Bush publicly
criticized Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's hardline policies in
the West Bank and Gaza Strip, after behind the scenes pressure failed
to bring results.
Bush
said Israel must "freeze settlement construction, dismantle
unauthorized outposts, end the daily humiliation of the Palestinian
people and not prejudice final negotiations with the placement of
walls and fences," in reference to the wall.
The
first phase of the barrier was completed in July 2003 in the northern
West Bank. The defiant Israeli government of Ariel Sharon approved
last month a new 100-million-dollar section of the controversial
barrier.