U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson Calls Illegally Occupied West Bank ‘Integral Part’ of Israel


  • August 4, 2025
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Mike Johnson said at the event that the Judea and Samaria mountains are the legal property of the Jewish people. He criticizes Israel’s “friends” who call for the recognition of a Palestinian state.

 

 

The Speaker of the US House of Representatives, Mike Johnson on Monday led a high-level Republican delegation on a visit to the occupied West Bank, where he told a rapt audience in an illegal Jewish settler colony that they are the rightful owners of the Palestinian territory.

 

“The mountains of Judea and Samaria are the rightful property of the Jewish people,” Johnson (R-La.) said in Ariel, using the biblical name for the West Bank, which includes East Jerusalem. Ariel was built on land stolen from the Palestinian towns of Salfit, Marda, and Iskaka after Israeli forces conquered the West Bank in a 1967 war waged on false pretense of an imminent threat of Egyptian and Syrian attack.

 

“Judea and Samaria are the front line of the state of Israel and must remain an integral part of it,” Johnson added.

 

The Palestinian Foreign Ministry condemned Johnson’s visit, calling his endorsement of Israeli annexation a “blatant violation of international law.”

 

“All settlement activity is illegal and void,” the ministry stressed, adding that Johnson’s stance “undermines Arab and American efforts to stop the war and cycle of violence, while flagrantly contradicting the declared U.S. position on settlements and settler violence.”

 

According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, at least 1,013 Palestinians, including 214 children, have been killed by Israeli soldiers and settlers in the occupied West Bank since October 2023. Settlers, often protected and sometimes joined by Israeli troops, have launched numerous deadly pogroms and other attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank in what critics say is a bid to finish what Israel started in 1948—the total conquest of Palestine, the ethnic cleansing of its Arab population, and Israeli annexation.

 

Last month, all 15 Israeli government ministers from Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party urged the prime minister to annex the West Bank. On July 23, members of the Knesset, Israel’s Parliament, voted 71-13 in favor of a symbolic measure declaring “Judea and Samaria” to be “an inseparable part of the Land of Israel, the historical, cultural, and spiritual homeland of the Jewish people” and asserting that “Israel has the natural, historical, and legal right to all of the territories of the Land of Israel.”

 

Netanyahu has repeatedly displayed maps showing the Middle East without Palestine, all of whose territory is shown as part of Israel. Following U.S President Donald Trump’s reelection last November, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, a member of the far-right Religious Zionist party, said that “the year 2025 will be, with God’s help, the year of sovereignty in Judea and Samaria.”

 

Around 150 U.N. member states currently recognize or plan to recognize Palestine. Recently, France became the first Group of Seven member to announce it will officially recognize Palestine. Last week, Canada said it would also do so, with conditions attached, and the United Kingdom threatened recognition of Palestine if Israel does not take “substantive steps” to end its annihilation of Gaza, where Israeli forces have killed or wounded more than 200,000 people since October 2023.

 

Last year, the International Court of Justice—which is also weighing a Gaza genocide case against Israel—found that the occupation is an illegal form of apartheid that must end as soon as possible. Both Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention and Article 8(2) the International Criminal Court Rome Statute prohibit settlement activity.

 

Approximately 750,000 Israelis currently reside in more than 250 illegal settler colonies in the West Bank. While Israel grants every Jew in the world the right to settle in Israel, it has refused to allow the approximately five million Palestinian refugees—people ethnically cleansed from Palestine during the foundation of Israel in 1948 and their descendants—to exercise their legal right of return to their homeland.

 

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This article is republished from Common Dreams under a Creative Commons license.

Read the original article.

 

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