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No one in Kadima is asking if J'lem will be divided, just how

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  • No one in Kadima is asking if J'lem will be divided, just how

    Ha'aretz, Israel
    Fri., September 21, 2007

    No one in Kadima is asking if J'lem will be divided, just how

    By Nadav Shragai

    Serious differences of opinion have erupted in Kadima over the
    possibility that the agreement of principles Israel is now negotiating
    with the Palestinians will determine the final-status deal on
    Jerusalem.

    Seven years after the Camp David summit in 2000 and the cabinet's
    subsequent decision to adopt, with reservations, then U.S. president
    Bill Clinton's plan to divide the capital, no one in Kadima is asking
    if Jerusalem will be redivided. The only question is how it will be
    redivided.

    Vice Premier Haim Ramon is promoting a plan to Palestinian Prime
    Minister Salam Fayad in which almost all Palestinian neighborhoods of
    East Jerusalem would be subtracted from the Israeli city and become
    part of a Palestinian capital in East Jerusalem. The areas inhabited
    by Jews, including the new neighborhoods south, north and east of the
    Green Line that divided the city until 1967, will remain under
    Israel's jurisdiction.

    The plan would also divide the Old City between Israeli and
    Palestinian sovereignty, with the Muslim and Christian Quarters under
    Palestinian rule, and the Armenian and Jewish Quarters under Israeli
    rule. Sovereignty over the Temple Mount would be divided between
    Palestinians and Jews as well.

    Ramon proposes handing over three neighborhoods soon after the
    agreement of principles is signed, if Israel is convinced that the
    Palestinian Authority can control them: Shuafat, in northern
    Jerusalem, near Pisgat Ze'ev and Atarot; Suahra, on the edge of the
    Judean desert; and Wallijeh, a village near the Massuah neighborhood
    overlooking the railway to Tel Aviv.

    In recent weeks, however, a counter-coalition inside Kadima has sprung
    up, headed by MK Otniel Schneller. Schneller is unwilling to give up
    Israeli sovereignty over the Old City and the Temple Mount, but will
    accept religious management of the holy sites. He is also willing to
    give up neighborhoods on the outskirts of the city - mostly to the
    north, such as Al-Ram, Qalandiyah and Kafr Akeb (most of which are
    already outside the separation fence) - as well as parts of a few
    other neighborhoods.

    However, Schneller stays away from calling his plan "division." He
    will not accept any substantial concession on the Temple Mount and
    demands that in the final Jerusalem arrangement, space be allocated on
    the Temple Mount for Jewish prayer - a demand former prime minister
    Ehud Barak raised at Camp David in 2000.

    Schneller believes that decisions about the future of Jerusalem should
    be made by representatives of the entire Jewish people, not just the
    Israeli public. He also believes that if the Ramon plan is adopted,
    Kadima will disintegrate, as many parliamentarians will be unable to
    support it.

    Kadima's mayoral candidate in the capital, businessman Nir Barkat, has
    already said that he is considering leaving the party due to the Ramon
    plan. Barkat wrote to Ramon this week saying that he had not been
    authorized by either the government or the party to propose plans on
    Jerusalem, and that Jerusalem and the rest of the country are entitled
    to know if this is the new Kadima position, and whether Ramon is
    acting on Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's authority.

    That, in a nutshell, is the key question: What does Olmert think? Back
    when he was mayor of Jerusalem, Olmert rejected any proposal for
    division - of the Temple Mount, the Old City or East Jerusalem as a
    whole. But Olmert is remaining mum, and his associates say that Ramon
    has permission but not authority.

    Many politicians believe this obscurantist formula means that Olmert
    is using Ramon's plan as a trial balloon. If it does not explode,
    Olmert is likely to adopt large sections of the plan.

    The battle inside Kadima over whether Jerusalem will be divided has
    already been decided. The question now is how - and also whether the
    party, as Ramon has, will call the spade a spade: division.
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