JERUSALEM, Feb. 7, 2006

Israeli PM Plans West Bank Withdrawal

Acting PM Ehud Olmert Makes Call To 'Disengage' From Judea, Samaria

  • Acting Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, center, tours the Israel separation barrier with IDF Chief of Staff Dan Halutz, left, and Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz Feb. 7, 2006 in the Jerusalem area.

    Acting Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, center, tours the Israel separation barrier with IDF Chief of Staff Dan Halutz, left, and Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz Feb. 7, 2006 in the Jerusalem area.  (GETTY IMAGES)

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(AP) 
Olmert told Channel 2 that Israel would retain a "united Jerusalem," a term understood as encompassing the eastern section claimed by the Palestinians for the capital of the state they hope to create. On Tuesday, Olmert toured construction sites of the separation barrier Israel is building in the Jerusalem area and said its completion is a top priority.

The barrier will extend along the length of the West Bank, dipping into the territory to encircle the settlements Olmert listed. Israel says it is necessary to keep suicide bombers out, but Palestinians denounce it as a land grab.

Olmert also hinted that Israel might carry out further unilateral withdrawals from lands the Palestinians want for a state, like its summer pullout from the Gaza Strip, especially now that Hamas militants sworn to Israel's destruction have swept Palestinian elections.

"We are going toward separation from the Palestinians," he said. "We are going toward determining a permanent border for the state of Israel."

Negotiations aimed at a peace treaty and a permanent border between Israel and the West Bank have been frozen for years. The Palestinians claim the whole territory, but Israel says the border is defined only by a cease-fire line and is negotiable.

Olmert's remarks sharpened Kadima's position on the central issue facing Israeli voters in March 28 elections: the country's final borders. Sharon formed the Kadima Party in November after despairing of bringing his longtime Likud Party around to his view that territorial concessions to the Palestinians were inevitable.

The party has held a strong lead in the polls, even after Sharon suffered a debilitating Jan. 4 stroke that elevated Olmert to interim prime minister.

Also Monday, Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz said Israel would draw its final borders within the next two years

Mofaz who followed Sharon out of the hard-line Likud into Kadima, also hinted the new party would carry out further unilateral withdrawals, and asserted that Israel's final borders would be drawn in the next two years.

"If we won't be able to reach agreed-upon borders, we will operate in a different way, which it is not appropriate to detail now," Mofaz said during a tour Monday of the West Bank. "We don't need to wait for someone else to impose our fate."

Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip and part of the West Bank in the summer, destroying 25 veteran settlements, in a unilateral move Sharon planned while Yasser Arafat was still alive. Israel was unable to deal with his successor, Mahmoud Abbas, and is even less likely to forge a deal following the landslide parliamentary election victory last month by the Islamic militant group Hamas.

©MMVI, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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