Germany's Merkel cancels meeting with Israel after settlements row


Germany said that a summit with Israel planned for later this year had been delayed, with Israeli media reporting it was due to the Jewish state's controversial new settlements law. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and other top officials had been scheduled to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his cabinet on May 10 in Jerusalem.

While the official response was that the meeting planned for May 10 in Jerusalem had to be cancelled due to elections in September, another reason was Merkel's dissatisfaction with the Israeli settlement legalization law passed earlier this month, Haaretz reported, citing anonymous German and Israeli sources. The paper cited an "Israeli source who was in contact with the German Foreign Ministry and the chancellor's office," who both expressed strong disapproval over the law.

The two governments decided that the next German-Israeli government meetings will not take place in the spring of this year but only next year," a German government spokesman told AFP. "The reason for the postponement is the multitude of international meetings under the German presidency of the G20," the spokesman added.

In late January, Germany had voiced doubts on whether Israel remained committed to reaching a two-state solution after it announced an acceleration of settlements in Palestinian territory.

Since 2008, German chancellors and Israeli premiers, as well as their senior officials, have met nearly annually in either Jerusalem or Berlin for a summit to underscore their countries' close relationship.

Until now Germany - a close ally of Israel, usually very cautious in its criticism - had merely asserted that such settlements are an obstacle to the peace process, without questioning Israel's willingness to reach an eventual peace deal with the Palestinians.

Netanyahu has said he still supports a two-state solution, but reportedly told ministers at the time that all restrictions on building settlements in east Jerusalem were being lifted. Netanyahu, who warmly welcomed Donald Trump's election as U.S. president, visits the White House today to test his supportive campaign pledges against emerging policy.

Israel passed a new law last week that legalizes dozens of Jewish outposts and thousands of settler homes built on private Palestinian land in the occupied West Bank. The European Union has condemned the legislation, and U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has said it "is in contravention of international law." The Israeli premier has announced more than 5,000 settlement homes since Trump's Jan. 20 inauguration, as well as the first new settlement for more than 20 years.