
US House Speaker Mike Johnson visits Israeli West Bank settlement
The Palestinian Foreign Ministry called the trip by the speaker of the US House of Representatives on Monday a 'blatant violation of international law'.
Johnson, who is next in line for the US presidency after the president and vice-president, is the highest-ranking US official to visit a West Bank Israeli settlement.
His trip comes amid escalating settler violence against Palestinian communities that killed two US citizens in July.
The Israeli military has also been intensifying its deadly raids, home demolitions and displacement campaigns in the West Bank as it carries out its brutal assault and blockade on Gaza.
Johnson's visit contradicts Arab and US efforts to 'end the cycle of violence' as well as Washington's public stance against settlers' 'aggressions', the Palestinian Foreign Ministry said.
'The ministry affirms that all settlement activity is invalid and illegal and undermines the opportunity to implement the two-state solution and achieve peace,' it added.
According to Israeli media reports, Johnson visited the settlement of Ariel, north of Ramallah, on Monday.
'Judea and Samaria are the front lines of the state of Israel and must remain an integral part of it,' Johnson was quoted as saying by the Jerusalem Post newspaper, using a biblical name for the West Bank.
'Even if the world thinks otherwise, we stand with you.'
The House speaker's comments appear to be in reference to recent moves by some Western countries – including close allies of the US and Israel – to recognise a Palestinian state.
'Illegal under international law'
Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem are illegal under international law. The International Court of Justice, the top United Nations tribunal, reaffirmed that position last year, saying that Israel's presence in the occupied Palestinian territories is unlawful and must end 'as rapidly as possible'.
Asked about Johnson's visit, UN spokesperson Farhan Haq told reporters on Monday: 'Our standpoint on the settlements, as you know, is that they are illegal under international law.'
Israel captured the West Bank and East Jerusalem in 1967, and annexed the entire holy city in 1980.
Successive Israeli governments have been building Jewish-only settlements in the West Bank on land that would be the home of a Palestinian state if a two-state solution were to materialise.
Hundreds of thousands of Israeli settlers now live in the occupied West Bank.
The Fourth Geneva Convention, to which Israel is a signatory, bans the occupying power from transferring 'parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies'.
While the Oslo Accords granted the Palestinian Authority some municipal powers over parts of the West Bank, the entire area remains under full Israeli security control.
Israel also controls the airspace and ports of entry in the territory.
Israeli settlers in the West Bank have full citizenship rights, while Palestinians live under Israel's military rule, where they can be detained indefinitely without charges.
Leading rights groups have accused Israel of imposing a system of apartheid on Palestinians.
'It's a matter of faith for us'
For decades, the US has publicly rejected West Bank settlements and called for a two-state solution despite providing Israel with billions of dollars in military aid.
However, US President Donald Trump has taken US policy further in favour of Israel, refusing to criticise settlement expansion or commit to backing a Palestinian state.
Many Republicans, meanwhile, have long expressed support for Israel from a theological perspective, arguing that it is a Christian religious duty to back the US ally.
'Our prayer is that America will always stand with Israel. We pray for the preservation and the peace of Jerusalem. That's what scripture tells us to do. It's a matter of faith for us,' Johnson said on Sunday during a visit to the Western Wall.
In a social media post, Marc Zell, chair of the US Republicans Overseas Israel, cited Johnson as saying on Monday that the mountains of the West Bank are 'the rightful property of the Jewish People'.
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