World | expansion Global Leaders Slam Israel's West Bank Expansion Plan Officials say move would trample peace deals By Matt Cantor Posted Jul 25, 2008 9:46 AM CDT Copied President Bush, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, left, and Israeli PM Ehud Olmert stand outside during their meeting at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2007. (AP Photo/GPO, Avi Ohayon, HO) Israeli plans to build a new West Bank settlement—one that was shelved after strenuous objections from the US in 2006—were revived yesterday, sparking an international outcry, the Washington Post reports. “They're burying the Annapolis process,” said a Palestinian negotiator, referring to agreements made at the Bush-led summit last fall. The State Department concurred, and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said it would violate international law. One Israeli analyst tells the Post that the move, to build 200 houses at Maskiyot, on a former military base deep inside the West Bank, reflects a calculation that "the American administration is too weak to do anything about it." The plan has yet to be approved by Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who interprets the Annapolis commitment not to build new settlements to exclude construction on areas Israel is expected to control under a future agreement. Read These Next Trump reportedly asked Zelensky if Ukraine could strike Moscow. Harry Potter's Emma Watson just lost her license. Union says 17 immigration court judges have been fired since Friday. This could be worse than 'the worst thing to happen to bees.' Report an error