West Bank Settlers Say Netanyahu Duped them with Annexation Backtrack

The Israeli national flag flutters as apartments are seen in the background in the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim in the Israeli-occupied West Bank August 16, 2020. (Reuters)
The Israeli national flag flutters as apartments are seen in the background in the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim in the Israeli-occupied West Bank August 16, 2020. (Reuters)
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West Bank Settlers Say Netanyahu Duped them with Annexation Backtrack

The Israeli national flag flutters as apartments are seen in the background in the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim in the Israeli-occupied West Bank August 16, 2020. (Reuters)
The Israeli national flag flutters as apartments are seen in the background in the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim in the Israeli-occupied West Bank August 16, 2020. (Reuters)

Israel’s settler leaders say Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has defrauded them of their long-held dream of annexing the occupied West Bank as part of the country’s normalization deal with the United Arab Emirates.

Their anger could be a problem for right-wing Netanyahu, whom they accuse of repeatedly floating the idea of annexation only to cave in to international pressure when the terms of the UAE deal required him to walk back his promises.

“He deceived us, defrauded us, duped us,” said David Elhayani, head of the Yesha Council, the settlers’ main umbrella organization.

“It’s a major disappointment. It was a once in a lifetime opportunity, a golden opportunity that the prime minister missed because he lacked the courage,” said Elhayani. “He’s lost it. He needs to go.”

Israel’s West Bank settlements - which range in size from a few hilltop caravans to sprawling commuter towns - were built by successive governments on land captured in a 1967 war.

Around 450,000 Jewish settlers now live among 3 million Palestinians in the West Bank, with a further 200,000 settlers in East Jerusalem. Most countries view the settlements as illegal, a view that Israel and the United States dispute.

When Netanyahu promised during recent elections to apply Israeli sovereignty to areas of the West Bank, including Jewish settlements, he said he first needed a green light from Washington.

That green light appeared to have been given by President Donald Trump’s Middle East plan released in January, which envisaged Israel applying sovereignty - de facto annexation - to its 120 settlements in almost a third of the West Bank.

But when Trump announced the UAE deal this month, he said annexation was now “off the table”.

Sovereignty
Polls have shown wide support in Israel for the UAE deal. But the ideological settler leadership has significant political clout, and has long been a bastion of Netanyahu’s support.

Aware that he might lose their backing to parties even more hawkish than his own, Netanyahu sought to keep settler hopes alive.

“Sovereignty is not off the agenda, I was the one who brought it to the Trump plan with American consent. We will apply sovereignty,” he told Israel Army Radio, saying the White House had merely asked for a suspension.

But many settler leaders are unconvinced. Bezalel Smotrich, a settler with the ultranationalist opposition Yemina party, said Netanyahu “has been deceiving right-wing voters for many years with great success”.

Palestinians, who seek a state of their own in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem, have vigorously opposed the policies of Trump and his senior adviser Jared Kushner, including their Middle East plan and UAE deal.

They accuse Trump, Kushner and Netanyahu of drawing up blueprints that would leave them only an unviable Palestinian state of separate enclaves scattered across the West Bank.

But the Trump vision of limited Palestinian statehood has created strange bedfellows.

The Palestinians say it gives them too little. But for the most hardline Israeli settlers it gives the Palestinians too much. For these settlers, any Palestinian state is anathema.

In the hilltop settlement of Kedumim, veteran settler leader Daniella Weiss said: “I don’t think the Jewish nation needs to give up any of its treasures, any part ... of our homeland, for a peace treaty.”

“I am a pioneer that established an outpost, then my children did it, now my grandchildren are doing it. This is the dream and this is the plan and this is what our movement does.”



Yemen Urges End to UN Mission Overseeing Hodeidah Agreement

A group photo of UNMHA members at the time of the mission’s establishment (United Nations)
A group photo of UNMHA members at the time of the mission’s establishment (United Nations)
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Yemen Urges End to UN Mission Overseeing Hodeidah Agreement

A group photo of UNMHA members at the time of the mission’s establishment (United Nations)
A group photo of UNMHA members at the time of the mission’s establishment (United Nations)

Yemen’s internationally recognized government has called for the termination of the United Nations mission tasked with overseeing the 2018 Hodeidah Agreement, just days ahead of a UN Security Council vote on whether to extend its mandate for another six months.

The government accused the UN Mission to Support the Hodeidah Agreement (UNMHA) of legitimizing Houthi control over Red Sea ports and failing to prevent the group from exploiting the area militarily and politically.

Information Minister Moammar al-Eryani said in a statement that UNMHA has “become a burden and an enabler of Houthi dominance,” offering political cover for their military presence and “blackmail” tactics.

UNMHA was established under Security Council Resolution 2452 in January 2019 to monitor the Stockholm Agreement, which included a ceasefire in the strategic port city of Hodeidah and a mutual redeployment of forces from the city and its three ports—Hodeidah, Salif and Ras Issa.

Six years on, Eryani said, the mission has failed to deliver any tangible results. “Not militarily, not economically, not even humanitarian-wise,” he said. “The developments on the ground have outpaced the mission.”

He called on the Security Council to end what he described as “international mismanagement” that undermines Yemen’s sovereignty and hampers efforts to restore state institutions.

Accusations of Bias and Inaction

Eryani accused the UN mission of failing to uphold the core tenets of the Stockholm Agreement. While government forces redeployed as required, he said, the Houthis refused to comply and instead reinforced their military positions, smuggled in weapons and fighters, and continued rocket launches from within the city.

Despite these violations, the minister said, UNMHA “remained silent.”

He also criticized the mission for becoming a “political shield” for the Houthis, enabling the group to consolidate military and economic control across western Yemen.

Eryani claimed that since late 2018, UNMHA has failed to monitor or verify redeployment, enforce the ceasefire, or reduce the visible armed presence in Hodeidah.

Hostage to Houthi Restrictions

In 2022, the Yemeni government formally requested that the UN relocate the mission’s headquarters to a neutral location, citing increasing Houthi restrictions.

Eryani said the Redeployment Coordination Committee - set up under the agreement -has not convened since 2020, and that the Houthis continue to occupy UNMHA offices and housing facilities, turning the mission staff into “hostages to the group’s pressure and extortion.”

The minister also criticized the UN Verification and Inspection Mechanism (UNVIM), saying it failed to prevent weapons smuggling through the ports or to reopen roads between Hodeidah’s districts. He added that the Houthis have not transferred port revenues to the central bank for civil servant salaries as stipulated in the Stockholm Agreement.

‘War Machine Financed Under UN Watch’

Eryani accused the Houthis of using the ports to finance their war machine. Citing government estimates, he said the group collected more than $789 million in port revenues between May 2023 and June 2024 - none of which was used to pay salaries or improve public services.

Instead, he claimed, the funds were directed toward military efforts and buying loyalty, exacerbating the suffering of local populations.

He also charged that the UN mission ignored repeated Houthi violations, including missile tests from the ports and attacks on international shipping in the Red Sea.

“The Houthis have turned Hodeidah into a safe haven for Iranian and Hezbollah experts, a hub for assembling drones and missiles, and a corridor for arms smuggling -all under the nose of the United Nations,” Eryani said.

US Signals Support for Ending Mission

In a recent Security Council session, the United States implicitly endorsed Yemen’s position. Acting US Ambassador Dorothy Shea described the UN mission as “paralyzed” and said it no longer reflects the situation on the ground.

According to the Council’s agenda, members will vote on Monday at 10 a.m. New York time on a draft resolution to extend UNMHA’s mandate until January 28, 2026.

Eryani urged the international community to take “a firmer stance” and shut down the mission, arguing that it now poses an obstacle to peace efforts and prolongs the humanitarian crisis.

“The Yemenis are not the only ones paying the price for the mission’s failure,” he said. “So is the region - and the world.”