In a significant policy shift with profound geopolitical implications, Israel’s security cabinet has approved measures facilitating land acquisition for settlers in the occupied West Bank while expanding Israeli enforcement powers in Palestinian-administered areas. The decision, confirmed by multiple Israeli media outlets on Sunday, represents a substantial departure from decades-old regulations that previously restricted private Jewish land purchases in the contested territory.
The approved measures reportedly include provisions allowing Israeli authorities to administer religious sites and extend supervisory jurisdiction into areas under Palestinian Authority control, particularly concerning environmental hazards, water violations, and archaeological site protection. The policy changes were announced by Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and Defense Minister Israel Katz, both prominent figures in Israel’s pro-settlement political movement.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas immediately condemned the measures as ‘dangerous, illegal, and tantamount to de-facto annexation,’ urging intervention from both the United Nations Security Council and the Trump administration. The timing of this decision is particularly significant, occurring just three days before Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s scheduled meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump in Washington.
This development occurs against the backdrop of accelerated settlement expansion that Palestinians argue systematically undermines the territorial integrity of any potential future state. Netanyahu’s government, which includes numerous pro-annexation coalition members, maintains that Palestinian statehood poses an unacceptable security threat. The Prime Minister’s position reflects the political realities of his coalition as he faces elections later this year.
Israel’s historical claims to the West Bank, citing biblical and historical connections to land captured during the 1967 Middle East war, contrast sharply with the 2024 non-binding advisory opinion from the United Nations’ highest court, which declared Israel’s occupation and settlement activities illegal under international law. The Trump administration has thus far declined to curb Israeli settlement expansion while simultaneously ruling out formal annexation of the West Bank.









