(HAARETZ).Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will seek to extend an informal agreement reached between his predecessor Ehud Olmert and the George W. Bush 
administration on the issue of West Bank settlement construction, and use it 
as the basis for negotiations with the Barack Obama government in 
Washington.
The Olmert-Bush agreement was reached ahead of the 2007 Annapolis conference 
between Israel, the Palestinians and the United States, according to a 
senior Israel official. Netanyahu was briefed in recent weeks on various 
aspects of the understanding, some of them recorded, others reached 
verbally.
"The understandings Olmert reached contain clauses that are good for Israel, 
and can certainly form a basis for understandings with the Obama 
administration," the official said, adding that the Bush government never 
agreed formally to the Israeli proposal, but in practice adhered to its 
guidelines and refrained from significant criticism of new settlement 
projects that met the criteria outlined in the agreement.
The understanding is an extension of a similar undocumented pact reached 
during the tenure of Olmert's predecessor, Ariel Sharon, and divides West 
Bank construction projects into four categories - those involving Jerusalem, 
settlements in major blocs, isolated settlements outside the blocs and 
unauthorized outposts. Regarding Jerusalem, Israel refused to accept any 
limitations whatsoever on developing Jewish neighborhoods in the city's 
eastern neighborhoods. On settlements in the major blocs (such as Ma'aleh 
Adumim), construction would be allowed even beyond the existing borders, as 
long as it remained in close proximity to the community itself ("No farther 
than two hills from houses at the settlement's edge," according to the 
official.)
In isolated settlements outside the major blocs, building will be allowed 
only within the existing construction boundaries, beyond which communities 
will not be permitted to develop. Unauthorized outposts, according to the 
agreement, must be evacuated.
In addition, Israel promised not to erect any new settlements, not to 
expropriate Palestinian land for settlement construction, and not to issue 
government incentives for settling communities beyond the Green Line, all 
promises made during the Sharon administration.
 
 
 
