Israeli leadership stance on Palestinian state
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu explicitly declared his position that "there will be no Palestinian state, here it belongs to us" during the signing ceremony of the agreement moving forward a new residential settlement project in the E1 area, located east of Jerusalem, by expanding the Maale Adumim settlement area and adding thousands of housing units to the occupied West Bank.
"We will protect our heritage, our land and our security," Netanyahu said, announcing a plan to double the population of the area.
The E1 project, which covers an area of some 12 square kilometers, was final approved by the Planning Commission of the Israeli Ministry of Defense with an investment of nearly US $1 billion and includes the construction of large-scale roads and infrastructure.
However, the project has been heavily criticized by the United Nations and many countries as it would cut the West Bank area in two and separate East Jerusalem from Palestinian territory, making the establishment of a Palestinian state with continuous territory almost impossible.
Under international law, particularly Geneva Convention IV, the settlement of Israeli civilians in the occupied territories is considered illegal, and United Nations Security Council resolutions have repeatedly affirmed that these settlements "have no legal status."
But Israel argues that the convention cannot apply to the West Bank because the area was not subject to state rule that was adopted before the 1967 Six-Day War, it also insists that the settlement was not a "population migration" because Israelis moved in voluntarily.
The move ahead with the E1 program also took place during a period in which Israel faced pressure from several Western allies, who were preparing to consider endorsing a Palestinian state at a UN General Assembly meeting soon.


















































