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Netanyahu would let West Bank settlers expand

Mark Lavie - Associated Press

Issue date: 1/27/09 Section: News
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Israel's Likud Party leader Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during the opening session of World Jewish Congress at Inbal Hotel in Jerusalem. A  poll conducted immediately after Israel ceased fire in the Gaza Strip put Likud as front-runner in Israel's upcoming elections with 29 of parliament's 120 seats.
Media Credit: Dan Bailty - Associated Press
Israel's Likud Party leader Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during the opening session of World Jewish Congress at Inbal Hotel in Jerusalem. A poll conducted immediately after Israel ceased fire in the Gaza Strip put Likud as front-runner in Israel's upcoming elections with 29 of parliament's 120 seats.

JERUSALEM - The front-runner in Israel's election said in an interview published Monday that he would let Jewish settlements expand in the West Bank if he's elected prime minister, threatening to put him at odds with the Obama administration.

The remarks by hawkish Likud Party leader Benjamin Netanyahu come just before the new U.S. special envoy to the Middle East, George Mitchell, is scheduled to visit Israel, the West Bank and elsewhere this week for talks aimed at keeping alive a fragile Gaza cease-fire and reviving Mideast peace negotiations.

Mitchell is a critic of Israel's West Bank settlements, which are a key issue in peace talks.

Mitchell is expected to meet with Israeli leaders, including Netanyahu. President Barack Obama has pledged to dive into Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking at the beginning of his term.

Netanyahu, who is already a critic of U.S.-sponsored peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians, was quoted by the Haaretz daily as saying he would allow the Jewish settlements to expand to accommodate "natural growth" - building new housing to accommodate growing families among the settlers.

Such growth, however, is ruled out in the internationally backed "road map" peace plan that serves as the basis for negotiations.

With Israel's Feb. 10 election just two weeks away and polls showing Netanyahu's party ahead, Israel and the United States appeared headed for a clash.

U.S. policy supports creation of a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza next to Israel, but Netanyahu, who served as Israel's prime minister from 1996 to 1999, has always opposed giving up territory in the West Bank, maintaining that Israel needs to control it for security.

"I have no intention of building new settlements in the West Bank," Netanyahu was quoted as telling international Mideast envoy Tony Blair on Sunday. "But like all the governments there have been until now, I will have to meet the needs of natural growth in the population. I will not be able to choke the settlements."
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