Reuters The Trump
administration said on Thursday that Israel's building of new settlements or
expansion of existing ones in occupied territories may not be helpful in
achieving peace with Palestinians, adopting a more measured tone than its
previous
pro-Israel announcements.
In a statement
issued two weeks before Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is due to
visit U.S. President Donald Trump, the White House said the administration
"has not taken an official position on settlement activity."
Trump, a Republican,
has signaled he could be more accommodating toward settlement projects than his
Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama. The latest statement reflects slightly
more nuanced language on how the new administration views settlement activity.
"While we don’t
believe the existence of settlements is an impediment to peace, the
construction of new settlements or the expansion of existing settlements beyond
their current borders may not be helpful in achieving that goal," the
White House said in a statement.
The statement could
disappoint Israel's far-right, which had hoped Trump would give an unqualified
green light on rapid settlement construction in the occupied West Bank and east
Jerusalem - areas Israel captured in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.
U.S. Secretary of
State Rex Tillerson spoke by phone with Netanyahu on Thursday, the State
Department said. It did not say whether they discussed the White House
statement.
Obama routinely
criticized settlement construction plans and his administration often described
settlement activity as lacking legitimacy and impeding peace.
The White House
statement came as Israel has ratcheted up settlement activity. On Wednesday, it
said it would establish a new settlement in the occupied West Bank, the first
since the late 1990s. It also announced plans for 3,000 more settlement homes
in the West Bank, the third such declaration in less than two weeks since Trump
took office.
An announcement a
week ago by Israel that it would build some 2,500 more dwellings in the West
Bank, where Palestinians now seek statehood, drew rebukes from the Palestinians
and the European Union.
Reuters
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