Settlement blocs


Settlement blocs is term used to refer to those Israeli settlements and territory around them considered candidates to be retained by Israel in any peace agreement. The exact extent of these blocs has never been defined or agreed upon.

Origin and development of the term

Usage is found in peace negotiations at Camp David in July 2000 and subsequently in The Clinton Parameters
According to a 2001 Foundation for Middle East Peace report, Israel’s Final Status Map at Taba, is both "conceptually and territorially reminiscent of" the 1995 Beilin–Abu Mazen agreement that established a Palestinian willingness to consider trading settlement blocs for equivalent Israeli land.
Palestinian leaders have accepted the principle of swaps although neither they nor the United States have ever agreed on a delineation of the blocs.

2000 and 2001

Starting with Camp David, Palestinians agreed Israel could annex some settlement blocs as well as Israeli/Jewish settlements established in East Jerusalem since 1967 such as Gilo, Neve Ya'acov, and Pisgat Ze'ev
At Camp David, Israel offered to establish a sovereign Palestinian state encompassing the Gaza Strip, 92 percent of the West Bank, and some parts of Arab East Jerusalem. The Palestinians used a total area of 5,854 square kilometers whereas Israel excluded the area known as No Man's Land, post-1967 East Jerusalem, and the territorial waters of the Dead Sea giving 5,538 sq. km. So 91% of 5,538 sq. km of the West Bank translated into 86% from the Palestinian standpoint.

2003

The Geneva initiative includes land swaps of 2.2 percent, with the settlement blocs of Gush Etzion, Ma’aleh Adumim, Modi’in Ilit and Givat Ze’ev becoming part of Israel.

2008

As part of the Annapolis plan, Olmert proposed annexing all the major settlement blocs, in exchange for 5.2 percent of Israeli territory whereas Abbas proposed giving Israel 1.6 percent of the West Bank in exchange for 2 percent of Israeli territory. Abbas did not include Ma’aleh Adumim or Givat Ze’ev but did agree to Modi’in Ilit and Gush Etzion.
Alan Dowty makes use of the Palestine Papers to refer to a "Summary of Olmert's Package Offer to Abu Mazen" of August 31, 2008, based on information provided by Palestinian spokesperson Saeb Erekat, to describe an offer whereby Israel would annex 6.8% in exchange for 5.5% of Israeli territory.

2015

Meeting with EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini, Netanyahu voices willingness for the first time since taking office to discuss size of settlement blocs and their borders with Palestinians.
In a report using data through 2015, Haaretz, without specifying how it had defined settlement blocs, gave the total number of settlers in blocs in the West Bank as 214,459 located in 19 settlements.

2017

The "Greater Jerusalem" law was introduced in 2016 and intended to include five settlement blocks, about 150,000 settlers, within Jerusalem’s municipal jurisdiction. International pressure, mainly from the United States, resulted in the draft bill being withdrawn from consideration in October, 2017.

2019

Speaking at a public conference on December 8, 2019, Netanyahu said:
I think the time has come to extend Israeli sovereignty over the Jordan Valley, and also arrange the status of all the settlements in Judea and Samaria, those inside the settlement blocks, and those that are not in the blocs. They will be part of the state of Israel.