Opinion In the West Bank, I saw how peace will require confrontation with Israel
December 16, 2023 Villagers
of Zanuta dismantle their houses and pack their belongings before
leaving on Oct. 30. Since Oct. 7, violence from Israeli settlers in the
West Bank has increased dramatically, with some Palestinian communities
deciding to abandon their villages. (Lorenzo Tugnoli for The Washington
Post)
Ekram
Quran stands on the roof of her house on the edge of Al-Bireh in the
West Bank, pointing to the hill 100 yards away where she used to roam as
a girl among fig and olive trees. “It was a place to breathe,” she
remembers. Now, what she sees is a barbwire fence and, beyond, arrayed
along the hilltop, the buildings of an Israeli settlement called Psagot.
Four
Israeli soldiers arrive about five minutes after we descend from the
roof. They demand to see Quran’s papers and mine, for “security.” After
checking our names, they return the documents and retreat to their post
at the settlement gate. We were lucky. Quran says that late last month, a
20-year-old Palestinian man was shot and killed on the street next to her house during a demonstration.
“It
is injustice,” Quran says when the soldiers are gone. Her family built
this home in 1961. The Israelis began constructing their settlement 20
years later, after they seized the West Bank in the 1967 war. Today, she
is powerless on her own property, which lies in a sliver of what is
known as Area C, the 60 percent of the West Bank that is under total
Israeli control.
The
devastating war in Gaza was happening just 50 miles away as we spoke.
But Quran, like most West Bank Palestinians I met over the past week,
doesn’t speak much about the violence. They are angry but also
frightened. Quran runs a graphic design business in Ramallah. She wants
to keep working and survive. Her tone isn’t militant rage but, rather, a
sorrow verging on despair.
Israeli settlements in the West Bank
For
three days this past week, I traveled the West Bank, from the arid
hills below Hebron in the south to the chalky heights of Nablus in the
north. What I saw was a pattern of Israeli domination and occasional
abuse that makes daily life a humiliation for many Palestinians — and
could obstruct the peaceful future that Israelis and Palestinians both
say they want.
Driving
the roads of the West Bank is — forgive the term — a “two-plate”
solution. Israeli settlers with yellow license plates zoom along on a
well-guarded superhighway called Route 60. Palestinians with white
plates navigate small, bumpy roads. Since Oct. 7, many of the entrances
to their villages have often been closed. Traveling in an Israeli taxi
with a Palestinian driver, I saw some of both worlds.
An
Israeli checkpoint along Route 60, visible from the kitchen of a house
in Al-Aroub refugee camp in the West Bank on Nov. 21. (Salwan
Georges/The Washington Post)
I
watched backups at Israeli checkpoints near Bethlehem and Nablus that
were over a half-mile long and could require waits of more than two
hours. The delays, indignities and outright assaults on Palestinians
have become a grim routine. “If I’m in a yellow-plate car, does that
change my blood?” asked Samer Shalabi, the Palestinian who was my guide
in the Nablus area.
My tour of the West Bank was a reality check about what’s possible “the day after” the Gaza war ends. President Biden and other world leaders speak hopefully about creating a Palestinian state once Hamas is defeated. I’d love to see that happen, too. But people need to get real about the obstacles that are in front of our eyes.
On
the ground, amid the grinding daily pressure of Israeli occupation, the
shared hope for a Palestinian state can seem like a fairy tale —
soothing to hear but a version of magical thinking. Standing in the way
are the Israeli settlements and outposts laid across the hilltops of the
West Bank, their high fences and concrete walls symbolizing their
apparent immovability.
“The
settlements were put there to prevent the creation of a Palestinian
state,” argued Daniel Seidemann, an Israeli lawyer who is perhaps the
country’s leading critic of the settler movement. He offered a guided
tour of settlement issues for me and two State Department officials
Monday, explaining the patchwork of the West Bank from the heights of
Mount Scopus and the Mount of Olives.
Israeli settlements in the West Bank
Here’s
how the math would work for the “de-occupation” that Seidemann says
would be necessary for a viable Palestinian state. More than 700,000
Israelis live in West Bank settlements, and at least 200,000 would have
to leave, he estimates. Some settlers would resist. “There is a
significant possibility of a civil war between the state of Israel and
the settler state of Judea and Samaria,” he warned, using the settlers’
biblical terms for the areas of the West Bank.
“If it’s not painful, it won’t be significant,” Seidemann concluded.
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For
settlers, obstructing Palestinian statehood is part of the mission,
Yehuda Shaul, a leading Israeli expert on settlements, told me. He noted
that back in 1980, Matityahu Drobles, who was then head of the World
Zionist Organization’s settlements department, stated his goal bluntly
in a broad plan. “Being cut off by Jewish settlements, the minority
[Arab] population will find it difficult to form a territorial and
political continuity,” he wrote at the time.
“The best and most effective way of removing every shadow of a doubt
about our intention to hold on to Judea and Samaria forever is by
speeding up the settlement momentum in these territories.”
Biden
is the latest president to confront the reality that addressing the
Palestinian issue means confronting Israel — especially over
settlements. The number of official settlements and unrecognized but
pervasive “outposts” keeps growing. A group called Peace Now says this
year marked the biggest increase since the group started tracking settlements in 2012.
Settlers
stage a sit-in at the main intersection in front of the Shavei Shomron
settlement on Nov. 8, closing traffic to Palestinian cars, as well as
the only road to Nablus from the south of the West Bank. Mostly women
and children took part in the demonstration since men have been called
up as reserves in the Israeli army. (Lorenzo Tugnoli for The Washington
Post)
The
funeral of Bilal Saleh, a Palestinian man killed by settlers earlier
that day, on Oct. 28. He was killed while picking olives from his land.
(Lorenzo Tugnoli for The Washington Post)
And
in recent years, there has been a frightening increase in violence by
settlers against Palestinians, in what human rights advocates say are
deliberate efforts to frighten them off land that the settlers believe
God gave to Israel.
Settler
violence has surged since Hamas’s Oct. 7 terrorist assault, which
killed approximately 1,200 Israelis. Since then, there have been 343
settler attacks against Palestinians, according to
the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
At least 143 Palestinian households, with 1,026 people (including 396
children), have been displaced by violence. Settlers have killed eight
Palestinians and injured 85, the U.N. organization says.
The
violent settlers almost always go unpunished. From 2005 to 2022, 93
percent of the 1,597 investigations opened by the Israeli police into
cases where Israelis were said to have harmed Palestinians were closed
without indictment, according to Israeli human rights organization Yesh Din; only about 3 percent led to convictions.
The
threat to Palestinians is especially severe in Area C, where Israelis
outnumber Palestinians by more than 400,000 to 300,000. The Israeli
military severely restricts travel by Palestinians there, and settlers
regularly attack villages and Bedouin camps.
Areas under total Israeli control,
or where Israeli security is present
Sources: West Bank Protection Consortium, B’Tselem
A
last word about settlements before I describe details of my trip. I
have some close Israeli friends who live in settlements, and they are
decent, principled people. Many of them would probably move if the
Israeli government decided that a two-state solution required it. The
violence comes from extremist settlers — and the danger is that they
seem to have support from members of the Netanyahu government.
One sign that the Biden administration might be taking the settlement issue more seriously was the announcement this month
that settlers believed to have been involved in violent attacks against
Palestinians may be denied visas to enter the United States, along with
their family members. That’s not a solution to this big problem, but
it’s a start.
Let’s
begin our tour at the southern edge of the West Bank, in the dry hills
south of Hebron. Israeli settlements have expanded in this region. A new
wrinkle here is the fight over “herding outposts,” where Israeli
farmers have tried to drive off Bedouin shepherds who have been grazing
this land for a century.
Saleh
Abu Awad, one of those Bedouin shepherds, met me Monday by the side of a
rocky field sprouting with green shoots in the mild December weather.
He is thin, with a weathered face and trim beard, and was wearing a
dusty sweatshirt emblazoned with a faded Emporio Armani logo.
Saleh Abu Awad, a Bedouin herder who says he was attacked by settlers in July. (David Ignatius/The Washington Post)
Nearby is the Israeli settlement of Meitarim, along Route 317, and an outpost known as Asa’el. You can watch a video in which an Israeli family at Asa’el celebrates the joys of farming this land, with children doing cartwheels on bales of hay.
A
haggard Abu Awad said that on July 13, he was attacked by settlers
while he was grazing his sheep. “This is our land. You should not be
here,” one of the settlers told him. Abu Awad told me his family has
been grazing its sheep nearby since the time of his great-grandfather.
But the settlers were intent. Abu Awad said a group came back later and
burned six of his tents and drove off 130 of his sheep, which he
estimates were worth nearly $50,000.
Abu Awad didn’t bother complaining to the Palestinian Authority. “They don’t have any power,” he said. The settlers have continued raids in the area. I’ve watched nearly a dozen instances of harassment captured on videos by Palestinian activists.
Israeli settlements in the West Bank
In
this area, known as Masafer Yatta, settlers have forcibly displaced the
residents of a number of entire communities since Oct. 7, according to
human rights organization B’Tselem. The settlers came back as recently
as last Sunday, the day before I talked with Abu Awad. Many Bedouins
have fled these grazing lands in fear, but Abu Awad said he is staying.
“I don’t have any other place to go,” he said. “We’re not the [Israelis’] enemies. We just want them to leave us alone.”
For
those Israeli settlers who hope to drive Palestinians from Area C, the
farmer-outpost strategy seems to be working. A settler leader named
Ze’ev “Zambish” Hever explained the strategy
to his organization, Amana, the main construction company for the
settler movement, in February 2021. “The shepherding farms which have
increased … today they cover close to twice the land that the built-up
communities [settlements] cover,” Hever said. “If it’s a war, if there’s
a battle for Area C, [local settler leaders] should behave like it’s a
war.”
We
drove north, along settler superhighway Route 60. We entered Hebron, a
dusty industrial town that for 40 years has been skirmishing with a
settlement called Kiryat Arba, planted near the heart of the city.
National
Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, one of the far-right members of
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition, lives in Kiryat Arba. In
August, he told a journalist:
“My right, and my wife’s and my children’s right, to get around on the
roads in Judea and Samaria is more important than the right to movement
for Arabs.”
Road
closures make travel a nightmare for Arabs. We passed the entrances to a
string of Palestinian towns and villages traveling north; most have
been blocked by the Israeli military with big piles of dirt or metal
gates. Palestinians who want to travel outside their villages in Area C
must pass through checkpoints staffed by often capricious Israeli
soldiers.
Olives harvested by Palestinians near their village in Susyia, West Bank, on Nov. 4. (Lorenzo Tugnoli for The Washington Post)
You
can see the toll of this harassment in the terraces of derelict olive
trees along the road north, near Hebron. Palestinian farmers have been
afraid to pick their olives — or have been physically prevented from
doing so. A Western diplomat told me olive oil production in the West
Bank might be 35 percent below average this year as a result.
Jerusalem
is the jewel in the center of this land. It’s also the most volatile
battleground between settlers and Israelis — and the place where the
United States will have the biggest challenge in framing a compromise.
Seidemann showed the two State Department officials and me how this
sacred battleground looks. His worries are summed up in the title of a
study he prepared this year for political and religious leaders around
the world: “The Strategic Encirclement of Jerusalem’s Old City.”
From
Mount Scopus, in East Jerusalem, Seidemann pointed across the hills
toward a big settlement called Ma’ale Adumim, which houses some 40,000
people. For several decades, Israeli leaders have hoped to vastly expand
it with a project known as E1. Seidemann calls that a “doomsday land
bridge” that would cut any future Palestinian state in half, separating
south from north.
Seidemann
took us southeast to the Mount of Olives and a view of Jerusalem’s Old
City, which is sacred to three religions. We saw the golden Dome of the
Rock and the Al-Aqsa mosques revered by Muslims; the Garden of
Gethsemane and other Christian holy sites; and beyond the Temple Mount
where the mosques are located, the Western Wall — the “Wailing Wall” —
that’s sacred for Jews.
One
big goal for conservative, religious Israelis is to increase their
presence throughout the Jerusalem area. To the south, Seidemann pointed
to where settlers plan to build a cable car over the predominantly
Palestinian district of Silwan that would reach the walls of the Old
City. To the north, where the Christian sites are located, there’s talk
about constructing a biblical theme park that would be overseen by the
Israeli parks authority. The political struggle over Jerusalem “has been
driven by religious pyromaniacs,” Seidemann told me.
A view of Jerusalem's Old City from the Mount of Olives. (Salwan Georges/The Washington Post)
People
on a controversial new suspension bridge over the predominantly
Palestinian Silwan district of East Jerusalem on Dec. 6. (Spencer
Platt/Getty Images)
Inside the Old City, I visited with young protesters who are trying to block construction
of a new luxury hotel inside the city walls in the Armenian Quarter, on
a parking lot and adjoining ground leased by the Armenian patriarch to
an Australian Israeli developer. The patriarch has since filed papers
with Israeli authorities withdrawing consent for the lease, but the
bulldozers have tried to enforce it nonetheless. They have been blocked
so far by a round-the-clock sit-in by Armenians, explained their leader,
Hagop Djernazian.
North
of Jerusalem is Ramallah, the Palestinian Authority’s seat of power.
It’s a tight, almost claustrophobic center for residents of Area A,
which makes up 18 percent of the West Bank and is nominally controlled
by the Palestinians. But even here, their writ is limited. On the
morning I visited, Israeli soldiers swept in and arrested two young
Palestinians in front of a little shop called the Olive Market.
Palestinian
security forces are supposed to keep order here. But local residents
complain that Palestinian forces’ main job is liaison with Israel and
that they can’t protect Palestinians from Israeli violence. I drove past
three separate offices for the security forces, each one a gleaming,
modern building. They have money, obviously, but little power.
Police special forces in central Ramallah, West Bank, on July 10. (Lorenzo Tugnoli for The Washington Post)
I
visited Sabri Saidam, a member of the Fatah Central Committee that was
long the dominant political group in the West Bank but is challenged
increasingly by Hamas. He was dressed all in black, in an office
decorated with images of Yasser Arafat, the iconic leader of the
Palestine Liberation Organization and the first president of the
Palestinian Authority.
Fatah
and the Palestinian Authority are said to have prepared a “vision
statement” about what comes after the war, and they claim to have as
many as 40,000 Fatah members in Gaza who could be reactivated for
security duties. Maybe the Palestinian Authority could be revitalized
for this role, as the Biden administration hopes. But right now, they
aren’t doing a very good job even of controlling the fragments of the
West Bank that are their responsibility.
Traveling
north from Ramallah is like slicing through a layer cake. You pass a
Palestinian village, then a hilltop settlement, then another village,
then an unofficial outpost, mile after mile. In February, the Netanyahu
government embraced nine of those outposts and made them official settlements.
This
checkerboard landscape is bound to produce tension, and I saw the
aftermath of two vicious examples on the road north toward Nablus —
where settlers and Israeli soldiers attacked Palestinian villages in
what they said was revenge for terrorist attacks. The State Department decried one such assault,
in which soldiers destroyed a family’s home to punish a 13-year-old,
tweeting: “An entire family should not lose their home because of the
actions of one individual.”
About 200 “rampaging settlers,” as Israeli publication Ynet called them,
attacked the village of Turmus Ayya on June 21. Many came from a
neighboring settlement called Shiloh, and some were masked. According to
Ynet, they burned approximately 30 homes and 60 cars. One Palestinian
was killed, and 12 were hurt.
Israeli
border police stop Jewish settlers from entering the Palestinian West
Bank town of Turmus Ayya on June 21. (Ohad Zwigenberg/AP)
People wait to enter Israel at the Qalandia checkpoint outside Ramallah on Dec. 10. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
“The
victims decided not to file a complaint due to their lack of trust in
the authorities; they stated that [Israeli] soldiers were present and
did not stop the attack,” a spokesman for Yesh Din, the Israeli human
rights organization that gathered testimony about the attack, explained
to me by email.
Israeli settlements in the West Bank
One Turmus Ayya resident told me that all his family could do was try to put out the fire before it destroyed their residence.
At
the western edge of town, facing the outskirts of the Shiloh
settlement, four burned Palestinian cars have been stacked in a charred
metal monument to the attack. The Turmus Ayya bloodshed shocked U.S.
officials partly because a majority of the town’s residents hold U.S.
passports. Andrew P. Miller, the deputy assistant secretary of state who
monitors the region, visited the town in August to express condolences.
Farther
up the road, you come to the town of Huwara, which was attacked by
nearby settlers on Feb. 26. According to evidence Yesh Din provided me,
the settlers burned dozens of cars at a dealership, set fire to a house
with its occupants inside and roamed about the town torching other cars
and homes and attacking one car with an ax.
Two Israelis, one from the Yitzhar settlement and another from an outpost called Givat Ronen, were later detained, according to the Associated Press.
Palestinians
among burned wreckage from clashes between Jewish settlers and
Palestinians in Huwara, West Bank, on Feb. 27. (Kobi Wolf for The
Washington Post)
Violence
has continued in Huwara, which was once a thriving commercial center
but, when I visited, had only a trickle of traffic on the main street.
Even
funerals aren’t secure. Mourners gathered in Huwara after an Oct. 6
attack that resulted in the death of a 19-year-old Palestinian man who
allegedly had thrown a brick at an Israeli vehicle. During the funeral
that same day, settlers and troops attacked again, wounding 51
Palestinians, according to
Reuters. Bezalel Smotrich, Israel’s finance minister and a leader of
pro-settler groups, visited the town later and said Israel should take
tougher action against Palestinian militants “to save lives and
reinstate security.”
The
day I visited Huwara, the town was still shaken. Jassim Audi had just
reopened his tiny coffee stall a few dozen yards from an Israeli army
guard post. “As long as the army is protecting the settlers, I won’t
have a normal life,” he told me.
This
army protection for settlers is one of the most dangerous — and
puzzling — aspects of the settlement mess. Shaul, who runs a group
called Ofek: the Israeli Center for Public Affairs, explained that with
the war in Gaza, West Bank duty has mostly been left to reservists, some
of whom come from the settlements and serve in “regional defense
units.” Some settlers who once served in the military simply put on
their old uniforms when they go raiding, Shaul said.
Drinking
his morning coffee on the quiet, wary main street of Huwara was Ali
Hussein, who lives in a nearby village. He shook his head cynically as
we discussed how to end the violence. “When we talk about a Palestinian
state, it’s unreal,” he told me. “Most of the land has been taken by
settlers.” The Biden administration’s promise of a happier “day after”
was like a drug fix, he said.
My last day in the West Bank, I visited the Kashkeesh family. I met them 41 years ago when I spent a week with them in Halhul, near Hebron. When I try to conjure the reality of Palestinian life, I think of them.
Hammadeh,
a stonecutter who was the patriarch of the family, died June 10 at 74.
He didn’t live to see the Gaza war, which would have destroyed what
shreds of hope he had left in the future. His wife, Antissar, still
youthful at 60, welcomed me along with her son Mouayed and several
daughters.
Like
so many Palestinian families, this one has survived by working and
studying hard, and staying out of trouble. I got a rundown on the two
sons, one a mechanic in Minneapolis now and the other running an
electronics store in Halhul, and the five daughters, who include a
nurse, a law student and a mathematics student.
“Living
in the West Bank has become a nightmare,” Mouayed told me. “You are
under siege in your town. You can’t take your family anywhere. You live
in cantons, separated from everyone. What you want in this moment is to
survive, and not to lose anyone in your family.”
Is
there a happy ending to this story? Probably not, unless Biden can make
a diplomatic push that we haven’t seen since the days of Presidents Jimmy Carter
and Bill Clinton. But on my journey, I met so many brave Israelis and
Palestinians who are working together to document obstacles to peace
that I can see a way forward — if America has the guts to help them.