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Palestinian
Force to deploy in West Bank
Middle East Desk Report
JERUSALEM—Israel’s defense minister on Tuesday said he would soon allow
600 foreign-trained Palestinian police to take up positions in a
volatile West Bank town in a gesture aimed at helping the moderate
Palestinian government restore law and order.
Palestinian officials, however, said the town, Jenin, does not require
additional forces. And they said Israel is still not doing nearly enough
to bolster moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in his
life-and-death showdown with the militants of Hamas — such as removing
roadblocks, dismantling illegal West Bank outposts or releasing
prisoners.
Defense Minister Ehud Barak’s announcement came at a sensitive time in
peace efforts. U.S.-backed peace talks have made little visible progress
since they were launched last November, and Israel has come under
growing international pressure to help prop up Abbas. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice is expected in the region next week to check up on
progress.
Speaking to reporters at an army base in the West Bank, Barak said the
Palestinian officers would be deployed in Jenin, a town in the northern
West Bank where Israeli soldiers frequently clash with Palestinian
militants.
He did not say when the police would arrive, but said he would discuss
the issue at a meeting Wednesday with the Palestinian prime minister,
Salam Fayyad. As part of the peace process, the Palestinians have
pledged to crack down on militant groups. While Fayyad says he is
capable of reining in gunmen, Israel maintains a large troop presence
throughout the West Bank, saying Palestinian forces are not yet ready to
take charge.
The 600 Palestinian officers have been receiving special training in
neighboring Jordan since January under a program funded by the U.S.
Jenin is known as a stronghold of West Bank militants and Israel
frequently conducts military raids to hunt down wanted men. But
Palestinian security officials say they have largely restored quiet to
the town and already have some 2,000 officers there, adding they were
perplexed by Barak’s gesture.
“We didn’t apply for more forces in Jenin. We have enough,” said Diab
al-Ali, a top Palestinian security commander in the West Bank. “The only
demand we have for Jenin is that Israel hand the city over to us.”
Palestinian officials say what matters is not the number of Palestinian
forces deployed in a particular area, but whether Israeli troops refrain
from carrying out arrest raids in West Bank towns.
Palestinian Interior Minister Abdel Razak Yehiyeh told The Associated
Press that Palestinian forces are indeed being trained in Jordan, but
there was no need to send them to Jenin.
“They are not the ones to decide where to deploy them. That’s up to us,
and we haven’t decided yet where to deploy them. Usually, we coordinate
the deployment of forces with the Israelis for the deployment. In this
case, we didn’t ask yet,” he said.
Barak said he is considering other measures to bolster the Palestinians
and improve the negotiating climate.
“We’re considering a series of steps that won’t hurt security,” he said.
Among them are allowing Palestinian forces to obtain additional vehicles
and “non-lethal” weapons, such as rubber bullets, and helping
Palestinian businessmen move freely between the West Bank and Israel.
However, Barak has made similar pledges in the past without taking
action. And on Monday, he rejected a key Palestinian demand, saying he
would not remove any of the hundreds of Israeli military checkpoints in
the West Bank for now.
The Palestinians and the international community, including Mideast
envoy Tony Blair, say the travel restrictions are stifling the West Bank
economy. Israel says the measures are needed to prevent attacks.
Blair has been leading an international effort to build up the
Palestinian economy to lay the groundwork for a future independent
Palestinian state. On Tuesday, the European Union said it has begun
providing the Palestinians with $463 million in promised aid for public
infrastructure, economic programs and refugees.
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