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Viewing cable 05TELAVIV570, ISRAEL'S COMMITMENTS TO THE USG AND THE WORLD BANK
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Reference ID | Created | Released | Classification | Origin |
---|---|---|---|---|
05TELAVIV570 | 2005-01-31 15:07 | 2011-08-30 01:44 | CONFIDENTIAL | Embassy Tel Aviv |
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 TEL AVIV 000570
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/26/2015
TAGS: EFIN PREL ECON KWBG IS ECONOMY AND FINANCE ISRAEL RELATIONS GAZA DISENGAGEMENT ISRAELI PALESTINIAN AFFAIRS
SUBJECT: ISRAEL'S COMMITMENTS TO THE USG AND THE WORLD BANK
PROCESS: A PERFORMANCE BASELINE
Classified By: Ambassador Daniel C. Kurtzer for Reasons 1.4 (b,d)
¶1. (S) Summary. As of the end of January 2005, the GOI had
shown various levels of commitment to fulfilling its
"Weissglas" commitments to the USG. It is following through
more consistently on its promise to engage on the World Bank
process dedicated to facilitating a viable,
post-disengagement Palestinian economy. Specifically the GOI
has:
-- Reduced the number of permanent West Bank checkpoints from
28 in January 2004 to 13 a year later;
-- Removed no outposts since June 2004 at which point the
number of post-March 2001 outposts stood at 44;
-- Not responded to the USG on the "construction line"
project;
-- Continued with its revenue transfers to the PA, including
the provision of previously attached revenues. The next
transfer, on January 30, will amount to NIS 313 million;
-- Agreed to fund technological upgrades at Karni and other
crossings, with a GOI-PA cost-sharing scheme underway. End
summary.
--------------------------
Checkpoints and Roadblocks
--------------------------
¶2. (S) The number of permanent checkpoints in the West Bank
decreased by half in 2004, from 28 in January 2004 to 14 in
December 2004. The GOI decreased the number of checkpoints
again by one in January 2004, to a total of 13, and a GOI
official told the Ambassador that if the Palestinian
Authority takes positive steps to control the violence, the
trend of reducing the number of checkpoints would continue.
The number of roadblocks also decreased in early 2004, but
that pattern was reversed after the Be'er Sheva double
suicide bombing in August. The IDF had reduced the number of
roadblocks from over 200 in January 2004 to 115 in the
summer, but the figure has increased to 130 from September
through December 2004. (Note: According to OCHA, the number
of IDF-imposed closures, for which the organization counts
both checkpoints and other physical obstacles hindering
freedom of movement in the West Bank, went up from 659 in
July of 2004 to 680 in November of 2004. OCHA breaks down
these obstacles into 67 checkpoints and 613 "physical
obstacles," i.e., earth mounds, road blocks, road gates and
trenches. End note.)
----------------
Outpost Removals
----------------
¶3. (S) There has not been any progress on outpost removals
since June 2004. Two new outposts were added since that
time, bringing the total number of post-March 2001 outposts
to 44.
------------------------------
Limiting Growth of Settlements
------------------------------
¶4. (S) Embassy Tel Aviv has not received a response from the
GOI on drawing "construction lines" around built-up areas of
settlements. Ministry of Defense officials have told the
Ambassador that the GOI has collected much data on the legal
status of each settlement and has current aerial photographs
of the settlements, but it needs to check and analyze the
information before sitting down with the U.S. team on the
demarcation exercise.
------------------------------------------
Revenue Transfers: The Good News Continues
------------------------------------------
¶5. (C) The GOI has maintained its regular transfer to the PA
of customs and other tax revenues collected on the PA's
behalf. It has concurrently moved forward with the transfer
of revenues previously attached by Israeli courts against
Palestinian parties. According to the Finance Ministry's
Rani Loebenstein, the next transfer will occur on Sunday,
January 30 and will amount to NIS 313 million, broken down as
follows: NIS 90 million in attached revenues and NIS 223 in
customs and other collections. Loebenstein noted that
approximately NIS 260 remains in attached revenues not
connected to terrorism cases. PA Finance Minister Salaam
Fayyad, according to Loebenstein, is negotiating directly
with Israeli courts on the release of an additional NIS 200
million in attachments related to acts to terror.
-------------------
World Bank Timeline
-------------------
¶6. (C) On June 23 the World Bank released its report
"Disengagement, the Palestinian Economy and the Settlements,"
which argued that Israel's planned disengagement will not
slow Palestinian economic decline unless accompanied by GOI
reform of the crossings regime and PA security advances. In
the run-up to the December 8 Capitals-level Task Force on
Palestinian Reform (TFPR) and Ad-Hoc Liaison Committee (AHLC)
meetings in Oslo, the Bank released four technical reports on
trade and exports, settlements, industrial estates, and
borders and trade logistics, which prescribed 18 steps the
GOI and the PA should take before the donor community can
reasonably increase assistance levels. Of the 12 prescribed
GOI steps, four key actions are replacement of back-to-back
shipping, maintenance of Palestinian labors flows into
Israel, removal of internal West Bank checkpoints, and
allowing the construction of a fixed-wing airport and
eventual deep-water seaport in Gaza. On the PA side, steps
include security and judicial reforms, reduced spending, and
reforming and unifying pensions. The Bank has advised
against a pledging conference until it can recommend to
donors that there have been significant policy changes from
both the GOI and the PA to justify increased inflows of donor
assistance.
------------------------------------
GOI Engagement With the Bank Process
------------------------------------
¶7. (C) Deputy PM Shimon Peres' new role in managing economic
aspects of disengagement, coupled with joint GOI-PA plans now
underway to upgrade Karni and other border crossings, may
indicate more rapid movement on Palestinian economic recovery
than anticipated at the start of the World Bank process. GOI
progress on other aspects of the process has been ambivalent,
however. GOI officials say Israel objects to the Bank's
language of "monitoring and benchmarks," but have indicated
it will accept a similar process under a different name.
Additionally, the GOI has not committed to replacing
back-to-back shipping or allowing the development of
full-service air- and seaports, but claims it is considering
both recommendations if and when the security situation
allows.
********************************************* ********************
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********************************************* ********************
KURTZER