Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05JERUSALEM3703
2005-08-12 16:51:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Consulate Jerusalem
Cable title:  

DISENGAGEMENT COORDINATION UPDATE, AUGUST 12, 2005

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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 JERUSALEM 003703 

SIPDIS

NEA FOR FRONT OFFICE; NEA/IPA FOR GREENE/LOGERFO/WATERS;NSC
FOR ABRAMS/MUSTAFA; TREASURY FOR NUGENT

E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/12/2015
TAGS: ECON PREL PGOV PHUM KWBG IS GAZA DISENGAGEMENT
SUBJECT: DISENGAGEMENT COORDINATION UPDATE, AUGUST 12, 2005


Classified By: Consul General Jake Walles for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).

This is a joint cable from Consulate General Jerusalem and
Embassy Tel Aviv.

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 JERUSALEM 003703

SIPDIS

NEA FOR FRONT OFFICE; NEA/IPA FOR GREENE/LOGERFO/WATERS;NSC
FOR ABRAMS/MUSTAFA; TREASURY FOR NUGENT

E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/12/2015
TAGS: ECON PREL PGOV PHUM KWBG IS GAZA DISENGAGEMENT
SUBJECT: DISENGAGEMENT COORDINATION UPDATE, AUGUST 12, 2005


Classified By: Consul General Jake Walles for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).

This is a joint cable from Consulate General Jerusalem and
Embassy Tel Aviv.


1. (C) Summary: On the eve of disengagement, several key
coordination issues are much closer to being resolved than a
week ago. Representatives of settler farmers and anonymous
private donors agreed early August 12 on a contract to sell
the greenhouses and other infrastructure for just under USD
14 million. The GOI and PA are close to reaching an
agreement on how to dispose of the settlement housing rubble,
though still need formal Egyptian concurrence. The UN Office
for the Coordination of Humanitarian Assistance (OCHA) and
the IDF are also near to agreeing on a common map of
checkpoints, roadblocks, and physical obstacles in the West
Bank which will then be used for trilateral discussions on
how to improve movement within the West Bank. The bilateral
technical crossing teams continue to meet to discuss
management fixes at the Karni terminal and possible
technological upgrades using the USD 50 million from the USG.
Bilateral technical water talks are also progressing since
the August 9 GOI handover of more detailed inventory
information. End summary.


2. (C) Passages and Trade:

-- The GOI and PA technical teams met August 11 to discuss
management fixes at Karni terminal and possible technological
upgrades using the USD 50 million. The Israeli team
committed to increasing operating hours, opening additional
lanes, employing all six pallet scanners, and building
cold-storage facilities on the Israeli side of the terminal.

-- Yoni Doton, Israel Airports Authority manager of Karni
terminal, left the meeting early after an argument with other
members of the GOI team. Doton protested his colleagues,
implication that delays at the passage were due to personnel
inefficiencies.

-- On capacity at Karni terminal, the PA team said it expects

300 trucks/day by September 1 and 500 trucks/day by December

1. It cited September 2006 as the PA,s target date for the
changeover from a back-to-back to a door-to-door shipping
system. (Note: While there is agreement, in principle, the
GOI has not yet agreed on how to implement a door-to-door
system. End note.)

-- GOI Defense Ministry advisor Netzach Mashiach will meet
with USAID and Emboffs August 15 to discuss GOI proposals for
how to spend the USD 50 million.


3. (C) WB/Gaza Link:

-- A trilateral meeting will be held under the auspices of
Brig. Gen. Baruch Speigel August 15 to discuss the details of
the convoy system.


4. (C) Movement in the West Bank:

-- UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Assistance
(OCHA) head David Shearer told ConGen EconChief August 12
that OCHA and the IDF's numbers on checkpoints, roadblocks,
and physical obstacles in the West Bank were converging with
OCHA now counting 384 as compared to the IDF's 320. Shearer
said OCHA's numbers have come down because many obstacles
have been removed or the IDF is not replacing earthmounds as
they naturally wear down. Manned checkpoints, however, have
not decreased, and new ones have been added to the list in
Hebron.

-- Shearer said that the IDF's list of obstacles increased
from 120 in June to the current 320 after it entirely updated
its list. This week, for the first time, the IDF gave OCHA a
complete data file of the coordinates for each of their 320
checkpoints, roadblocks, and physical obstacles. OCHA has
now mapped its coordinates over the IDF ones. The
differences, Shearer said, for example, are mostly where OCHA
counts four barriers on a road while the IDF only counts
three. Shearer described the IDF's newfound willingness to
work with OCHA as a "leap forward" which he largely
attributed to pressure from QSE Wolfensohn and the USG.

-- Shearer said that after OCHA and the IDF agree on a common
map, likely at a planned August 17 meeting, OCHA will share
the map with the PA (which already uses and refers to OCHA's
maps as its own point of reference) and then the parties will
begin discussing how to improve movement in the West Bank.


5. (C) Air/Seaport/Rafah:

-- According to PA sources, the PA understands that the GOI
believes it can have the necessary infrastructure for cargo
and passengers in place at the Kerem Shalom tri-border
crossing within 90 days of an agreement to use Kerem Shalom.
The PA also understands that the GOI is willing to
re-evaluate how it handles the crossing after six months. PA
interlocutors, however, do not believe the GOI would be open
to reconsidering the issue after six months. (Note: The PA
has not yet agreed to move the Rafah crossing to Kerem
Shalom. End Note.)


6. (C) Settlement Housing:

-- According to a PA readout of the August 9 trilateral
meeting, PA Civil Affairs Minister Dahlan told GOI Defense
Minister Mofaz and QSE Wolfensohn that he had spoken
informally with Egyptian General Intelligence Services
Director Omar Soliman who said the Egyptian government
agreed, in principle, to disposing of the nonreusable
settlement housing rubble in Egypt: (1) if Israel disposed
of 20 percent of the rubble in Israel; (2) if Egyptian
specialists could have access to the rubble (or what would
become the rubble) as soon as possible; and (3) if the
agreement was completed on a business-to-business basis.
Dahlan also proposed trucking sand back into Gaza from the
Sinai.

-- According to that same PA readout of the August 9
trilateral, Minister Mofaz said: (1) he would coordinate the
movement of two or three Egyptian specialists; (2) Israel
would accept that 20 percent of the rubble should be disposed
of in Israel; and (3) trucks would not be searched when they
left Gaza going to Egypt but they would be searched upon
their return back into Gaza.

-- QSE team members report they are discussing a trilateral
statement of understanding on the arrangement. There are two
remaining issues still to be worked out on the statement.
One issue involves language referring to Israel's commitments
under international law and the other involves whether to
refer to Egypt, specifically, as a site for disposal of the
unusable rubble. Both sides report that there will likely be
another meetings to finalize details of the arrangement next
week.

-- Israeli Defense Ministry contacts told the Ambassador
August 12 that demolition of settler homes will be "heavy" as
opposed to &light,8 which they said is also the PA
preference. The decision was based on the GOI,s concern for
risk to contractors, and its belief that little usable rubble
will remain even with light demolition. The GOI has reported
that there is no asbestos in the houses, but only in some
public buildings, which will not be demolished.

-- At the August 9 trilateral meeting, the PA team received
from the GOI an inventory of the public buildings that would
be left intact in the settlements, including educational,
municipal, and service utility structures.


7. (C) Greenhouses:

-- Early August 2, the representatives of the settler farmers
and the anonymous donors signed the contract selling the
greenhouses, associated equipment, and most of the packing
houses for a little less than USD 14 million. The exact
amount of the final transaction will depend on the final
decisions of the assessor on the state and quality of the
greenhouses. As stated in the contract, the title to the
assets change hands on the day the IDF leaves Gaza. The
Israeli NGO Economic Cooperation Foundation will own the
assets for a brief period before it abandons them to the
Palestine Economic Development Company (PEDC),who will
assume ownership and manage the farms. (Note: The PEDC is
fully owned by the Palestine Investment Fund (PIF). End
note.)

-- The QSE team is working to ensure that the IDF allows the
assessors in for one last inspection just before the IDF
pulls out and that the Palestinian workers who have been
working the farms are allowed to access the farms as the IDF
leaves.

-- The QSE team and USAID's Palestinian Agribusiness
Partnership Activity (PAPA) will work with the PEDC to
provide the necessary technical assistance to properly manage
the farms.


8. (C) Humanitarian issues:

-- COGAT briefed donor representatives August 12 at the Erez
DCL on IDF planning for facilitation of humanitarian
assistance to Gaza during disengagement. Maj. Uri Singer
said that the Erez and Karni terminals will continue to
operate but will be subject to closure without notification.
Internal checkpoints, including Abu Kholi, Mawassi, and the
Eli Sinai area, will be closed to non-evacuees for three days
at the start of withdrawal. Abu Kholi will be open
thereafter between the hours of 2230 and 0530.

-- With prior COGAT coordination, the donor community will be
able to move during the hours of darkness and in the early
mornings. Maj. Singer will provide donors with an IDF
contact list by August 14 or 15.


9. (C) Other issues:

-- Israeli and Palestinian water officials held a technical
committee meeting August 9. PA officials confirmed to
ConGenoff that the GOI passed further inventory information
to the PA team during this meeting. The sides will meet
again next week. Mekorot, the Israeli water company, is
training eight Palestinian engineers so that they can operate
the wells in the current settlement areas in Gaza. Israel is
leaving in place a pipeline from Kissufim to Gush Katif
serving the settlements, along with 20 pumping stations, in
case the Palestinians want to buy the 4.9 million cubic
meters (MCM) of water Mekorot has been selling to the
settlers from the Israeli grid.

-- Palestinian Water Authority Chief Fadel Ka'wash told
USAIDoff AuguQ11 that the PA cabinet will approve August 15
the memorandum of understanding for the USAID-funded Gaza
Emergency Connector, which will supply five MCM of water to
the East Gaza City area. A COGAT infrastructure official
told ESTH Officer that Israel is proceeding with its part of
the connector between Nahal Oz and the border with Gaza and
will be done with its section by December.
WALLES