Transportation for Palestinians in the Bethlehem and Hebron governorates to Jericho in the Jordan Valley would go through a new underground tunnel [that the régime] is planning to build to bypass the wilderness east of Jerusalem. What this means is that the entire space between Jerusalem and the edges of the Jordan Valley would become accessible to Israelis only.
The project, approved by the Israeli government earlier this month, will cost $90 billion, which Israel plans to cover from a special fund it feeds with pirated Palestinian customs money collected on behalf of the Palestinian Authority (PA). These funds are ostensibly meant for development projects for the Palestinian population in the West Bank, but the project isn’t about the improvement of Palestinian transportation — it’s about the consolidation of Israeli control over the geographic area of the West Bank east of Jerusalem. The Fabric of Life project would effectively ban any Palestinian circulation in this zone.
The larger context of the Fabric of Life is only one piece in Israel’s larger “Greater Jerusalem” development plans, which Israel first laid out in the early 2000s under then-Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
The idea is simple; connect East Jerusalem, which Israel annexed in 1981 and treats like a part of its territory, to a series of […] settlements which extend east of the city through the Jerusalem desert, reaching the very edge of the Jordan Valley. This would transform the some 12-square kilometers in the West Bank targeted by this project into an extension of the eastern limits of Jerusalem. On Israeli maps, this is known as the E-1 area, which stands for “East-1.”
This strip of land, which is 35 kilometers long and 25 kilometers wide, would become a part of Israel proper, cutting through the West Bank from West to East.
In 2007, Israel approved another similar project, dubbed the “Sovereignty Road,” which includes building another underground tunnel that runs under Israel’s Road-1 connecting the southern West Bank to the center, making it the only available route to Palestinians and clearing the road above ground for exclusive Israeli use.
As the Sovereignty Road bypasses the eastern periphery of Jerusalem, which represents Palestinian continuity between the center and the south, the Fabric of Life would bypass the wilderness to the east, which represents Palestinian continuity between Jerusalem and the Jordan Valley. Together, both projects would drain the entire West Bank area east of Jerusalem of Palestinian circulation, isolating the Palestinian communities still living there.
(Spotted here.)