{ "id": "IN11214", "type": "CRS Insight", "typeId": "INSIGHTS", "number": "IN11214", "active": true, "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "versions": [ { "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "id": 615460, "date": "2020-01-30", "retrieved": "2020-01-30T23:00:21.805634", "title": "Israel and the Palestinians: U.S. Peace Plan and Possible Israeli Annexation", "summary": "President Trump released a long-promised \u201cPeace to Prosperity\u201d plan for Israel and the Palestinians on January 28, 2020, after obtaining support from Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Netanyahu\u2019s main political rival Benny Gantz. The release and Netanyahu\u2019s announced intention to annex parts of the Israeli military-controlled West Bank might affect a closely-contested Israeli election scheduled for March 2\u2014the third in the past year pitting Netanyahu (who has been indicted on corruption charges) and Gantz against one another. Members of Congress have had mixed reactions to the plan, which has been widely seen as favoring Israeli positions more than past U.S. efforts on these issues.\nProspects for negotiations seem dim given concerted opposition from Palestinian leaders. Amid a variety of regional and international reactions, some key Arab states have encouraged negotiations, and U.S. officials say that the Palestinians will have four years to satisfy the conditions on obtaining statehood (see below). \nKey Points of the Plan\nAs released and summarized, the plan suggests the following key outcomes for future Israeli-Palestinian negotiations:\nBorders and settlements. Israel would acquire sovereignty over about 30% of the West Bank (see Figure 1), including settlements and most of the Jordan Valley. The Palestinians could eventually acquire a form of sovereignty (as described below) over the remaining territory. The territory would include areas that the Palestinian Authority (PA) currently administers, and additional land acquired in compensatory swaps\u2014with a number of non-contiguous areas connected by roads, bridges, and tunnels (see Figure 2 and Figure 3). \nJerusalem and holy sites. Israel would have sovereignty over nearly all of Jerusalem, with the Palestinians able to obtain some small East Jerusalem areas on the other side of an Israeli security barrier. According to David Friedman, U.S. ambassador to Israel, the status quo prohibiting non-Muslim worship on the Temple Mount/Haram al Sharif would continue, along with Jordan\u2019s custodial role regarding Muslim holy sites. \nSecurity. Israel would retain overall security control over the entire West Bank, with the potential for Palestinians to assume more security responsibility over time in territory that they administer. \nPalestinian refugees. Palestinian refugee claims would be satisfied through internationally-funded compensation and resettlement outside of Israel (i.e., no \u201cright of return\u201d) in the West Bank, Gaza, and third-party states.\nPalestinian statehood. The Palestinians could obtain a demilitarized state within the areas specified in Figure 2 and Figure 3, with a capital in Abu Dis or elsewhere straddling the East Jerusalem areas mentioned above and their outskirts. Statehood would depend on the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and PA meeting specified criteria that present considerable domestic challenges, including but not limited to disarming Hamas in Gaza, ending certain international initiatives and financial incentives for violence, and recognizing Israel as \u201cthe nation state of the Jewish people.\u201d\nPLO/PA Rejection and Possible Israeli Annexation\nPLO Chairman and PA President Mahmoud Abbas categorically rejected the plan, in line with previous PLO/PA statements asserting that Trump Administration actions have undermined Palestinian positions, and in the context of public polling indicating opposition to U.S. efforts. In June 2019, PLO/PA leaders rejected the Administration\u2019s economic framework for the peace plan, insisting that they would not bargain away their core national demands. In December 2017, the PLO/PA had suspended high-level contacts with the Administration after President Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel\u2019s capital. Since then, U.S.-Palestinian relations have worsened as the Administration has suspended U.S. aid, downgraded U.S.-Palestinian diplomatic ties, and boosted Israeli claims to Jerusalem, the Golan Heights, and West Bank territory. \nShortly after the plan\u2019s release, Netanyahu said that his government would begin considering measures that would effectively unilaterally annex Israeli West Bank settlements and the Jordan Valley. The plan\u2019s conceptual maps (see Figure 1 and Figure 2 below) identify West Bank areas that are eventually expected to come under Israeli sovereignty, and Secretary of State Michael Pompeo has said that the United States would support annexation that is consistent with the maps. Nevertheless, verifying a proposal\u2019s consistency with the U.S. plan may take months, and it is unclear whether Israel\u2019s government\u2014given its interim status\u2014would have domestic legal authority to move forward. From an international standpoint, various U.N. Security Council resolutions and existing Israeli-Palestinian agreements provide for resolving the status of the West Bank and Gaza Strip via negotiations.\nQuestions\nThe U.S. plan and possible Israeli annexation moves could raise a number of questions with implications for U.S. policy, including:\nIsraeli political outcomes. To what extent, if at all, might the plan and possible unilateral annexation moves influence voters in Israel\u2019s March 2 election, or the subsequent government formation process? \nAnnexation. How, both politically and legally, might Israel extend its sovereignty and/or law to West Bank territory, and what specific territory would it annex? How would annexation affect the rights, living situations, and interactions of Israeli settlers and Palestinians in affected territory? How would it affect the viability of a negotiated two-state solution?\nImmediate consequences. How will Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza respond to the plan and any possible Israeli annexation in the West Bank? Will the PA continue to coordinate on West Bank security with Israel and observe the current geographical division of administrative responsibility? What factors could influence the intensity of any protests?\nRegional and international responses and impact. How are key Arab states responding to the plan or possible annexation, and how is public opinion influencing leaders\u2019 stances? What will be the impact on Jordan, its relations and peace treaty with Israel, the Palestinians that make up the majority of its population, the stability of its monarchy, and its support for U.S. military and political goals? How will other countries and international organizations, including the United Nations and International Criminal Court, respond to the plan?\nDiplomatic prospects. Can the plan, or parts of it, serve as a basis for future negotiations? Can economic penalties or incentives sway Palestinian decision-making? How might the plan affect U.S. political influence on Israeli-Palestinian matters and other global issues going forward? \nFigure 1. Conceptual Map of Israel\n/\nSource: U.S. peace plan, January 2020.\nFigure 2. Conceptual Map of Future Palestinian State\n/\nSource: U.S. peace plan, January 2020.\n\nFigure 3. Unofficial Map with Green Line\n/\nNotes: Green lines on map represent 1949-1967 Israel-Jordan armistice line (for West Bank) and 1950-1967 Israel-Egypt armistice line (for Gaza). 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