by Leo Rennert
                               Haaretz  and other Israeli left-wing media concocted an anti-Israel gotacha  piece a few days ago when they discovered that authorities were  soliciting public comments on previously announced plans for  construction of some 1,300 housing units in Jewish neighborhoods of  Jerusalem.  Planning for this additional housing has been public  knowledge for a long time and it may take several more years before any  construction actually gets under way.
But  this didn't matter to correspondents of the New York Times and the  Washington Post, which saw an opening to portray Israel as hampering  efforts to resume direct negotiations with the Palestinian Authority.   And, predictably, President Obama, the State Department and the European  Union also let fly with condemnations of Israel -- without even first  checking with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu for some clarification.
What  is utterly ludicrous about this concocted tempest in a Jerusalem teacup  is that the bulk of the new apartment units are to go up in Har Homa, a  Jewish neighborhood of some 12,000 residents in southeast Jerusalem.   Two thirds of Har Homa is on land purchased by Jews after the First  World War.  The other third is owned by Arabs.  The entire existing Harm  Homa neighborhood was built on Jewish-owned land and plans for  additional housing units also are confined to this part of Har Homa.    None of this appeared in media reports or in the criticism leveled by  Obama, the State Department and the European Union.
Nor  did they bother to point out that, under any realistic scenario for a  two-state solution, even with a division of Jerusalem, Har Homa will  remain on the Israeli side.
With  typical historical amnesia, these Israel-bashers also failed to point  out that, during Israel's War of Independence, Jordanian forces  attempting to eliminate the Jewish state used Har Homa as a vantage  point from which to fire on the Old City of Jerusalem and other  neighborhoods of the city.
In  their cramped and selective sense of history, none of this  matters.  Their historical perspective begins with the last day of the  Six-Day War in 1967 when Israel prevailed over Jordanian and other Arab  armies intent on destroying it, and in the process reunified Jerusalem.
Thus, Washington Post correspondent Joel Greenberg describes Har Homas [sic] as an "area of the West Bank annexed to Jerusalem."  New York Times correspondent Isabel Kershner, in similar vein, calls  it a "Jewish residential development in southern Jerusalem in territory  that Israel captured from Jordan in the 1967 war, and then annexed."
So  never mind that Har Homa has been on Jewish owned land from well before  Jordan illegally occupied it in 1948, in clear violation of the 1947 UN  two-state partition plan.
All  that history is brushed aside.  What matters to the Times and the Post  -- as well as to Obama, the State Department and the Europeans -- is  their own brand of historical revisionism that ignores all Jewish ties  and claims to Jerusalem for several thousands of years before the  Six-Day War of 1967.
 
For his part, Prime Minister Netanyahu countered with a sharp retort to Israel's critics by treating them a post-1967 history lesson of his own.
"Jerusalem  is not a settlement, it is the capital of Israel," he declared.   "Israel does not see any connection between the peace process and the  policy of planning and construction in Jerusalem, which has not changed  in 40 years.  For the last 40 years every Israeli government built in  every part of the city.   During that period peace agreements were  signed with Egypt and Jordan and for 17 yers [sic] direct negotiations were  held with the Paletinians [sic].  These are historical facts.  Construction in  Jerusalem has never interfered with the peace process."
Leo Rennert
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