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Sharon OKs 1,000 settlement homes in W. Bank

Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has approved building tenders for 1,000 more homes in Jewish settlements in the West Bank frozen earlier to avoid upsetting the United States, political sources said on Tuesday.
Israeli bulldozers prepare the ground for the construction of a West Bank road, on Aug. 5, on a hill in the outskirts of the Jewish settlement of Maaleh Adumim, where Israeli officials say they will build new housing units.
Israeli bulldozers prepare the ground for the construction of a West Bank road, on Aug. 5, on a hill in the outskirts of the Jewish settlement of Maaleh Adumim, where Israeli officials say they will build new housing units. Oded Balilty / AP file
/ Source: Reuters

Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has approved building tenders for 1,000 more homes in Jewish settlements in the West Bank frozen earlier to avoid upsetting the United States, political sources said on Tuesday.

A political source said the move aimed to defuse resistance in Sharon's Likud party to his Gaza pullout plan and to bringing center-left proponents into his coalition. Likud members are to convene on Wednesday to vote on a link-up with the Labor party.

The sources said the tender package did not flout recent understandings with Washington that new Jewish housing in the occupied West Bank, where Palestinians are in revolt, would be built within existing settlement boundaries.

They noted that President George W. Bush assured Sharon in April that if he carried out his "disengagement" from Gaza, Israel could count on retaining parts of the West Bank with some large settlements under any future peace deal with Palestinians.

But Washington has also been pressing Israel to dismantle proliferating settler outposts and curb settlement expansion to help revive an internationally-backed peace "road map" promising Palestinians a viable state in the West Bank and Gaza.

Political sources said the tenders involved housing in seven settlements Sharon has vowed never to cede.

"Disengagement" entails removing all 21 Gaza settlements containing 8,000 Jews while retaining larger West Bank enclaves with most of the 240,000-strong settler population.

Sharon in the past three weeks also approved tenders for 800 additional homes in the largest West Bank settlement, Maale Adumim. But political sources predicted consultations with Washington before the Maale Adumim construction proceeded.