World February 8, 2026

Israeli security cabinet approves measures easing settler land purchases and expanding powers over Palestinians

Moves reported to roll back long-standing restrictions on private Jewish land buys in the West Bank and broaden Israeli enforcement in PA-run areas

By Ajmal Hussain
Israeli security cabinet approves measures easing settler land purchases and expanding powers over Palestinians

Israel's security cabinet has approved a package of measures, reported by Israeli media, that would ease land purchases by settlers in the occupied West Bank and give Israeli authorities increased enforcement powers in areas administered by the Palestinian Authority. The changes were described as removing decades-old limits on private Jewish purchases, enabling Israeli administration of certain religious sites, and extending oversight of environmental, water and archaeological offences in PA-controlled zones. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas called the steps dangerous and akin to de-facto annexation.

Key Points

  • Security cabinet approved measures reported to remove long-standing restrictions on private Jewish purchases of West Bank land, and to allow Israeli administration at some religious sites.
  • Reported expansion of Israeli oversight would target environmental hazards, water offences and damage to archaeological sites in areas administered by the Palestinian Authority - potentially affecting local resource management and regulatory enforcement.
  • The moves were reported days ahead of Prime Minister Netanyahu's meeting in Washington with U.S. President Trump and take place amid an upcoming Israeli election and coalition support from pro-settler members.

Israel's security cabinet has given approval to a set of measures that media reports say will make it easier for Jewish private citizens to purchase land in the occupied West Bank while simultaneously expanding Israeli enforcement authority over Palestinians in some areas, according to Israeli news outlets.

The West Bank is among the territories the Palestinians seek for a prospective independent state. Much of the territory remains under Israeli military control, with limited Palestinian self-rule in certain zones administered by the Western-backed Palestinian Authority (PA).

Citing statements attributed to Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and Defence Minister Israel Katz, the Israeli outlets Ynet and Haaretz reported the approved steps would remove regulations in place for decades that have prevented Jewish private citizens from buying land in the West Bank. The reporting said the measures also include provisions to permit Israeli authorities to administer some religious sites.

In addition, the measures were reported to extend Israeli supervision and enforcement into areas under PA administration for specific categories of offences. These areas of expanded oversight, as described in the reporting, include environmental hazards, water offences and damage to archaeological sites.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas responded to the reported measures by calling them dangerous, illegal and tantamount to de-facto annexation. Requests for comment to the Israeli ministers named in the reports were not immediately answered, the accounts said.

The timing of the reported approvals was noted in the coverage: they come three days before Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was scheduled to meet in Washington with U.S. President Donald Trump. The reporting recalled that while President Trump has said he ruled out formal Israeli annexation of the West Bank, his administration has not moved to restrict Israel's accelerated settlement building, an activity the Palestinians say reduces the territory available for a future state.

Netanyahu, who faces an election later this year, regards the creation of a Palestinian state as a security risk, according to the reporting. His ruling coalition includes several pro-settler members who advocate for Israel to annex the West Bank, territory captured in the 1967 Middle East war to which Israel cites biblical and historical ties.

The coverage also referenced a 2024 non-binding advisory opinion from the United Nations' highest court, which said Israel's occupation of Palestinian territories and settlements there is illegal and should be brought to an end as soon as possible. The reporting added that Israel disputes that view.

Risks

  • Potential diplomatic and political backlash - Palestinian leaders called the measures illegal and tantamount to de-facto annexation, which could increase tensions and affect regional stability.
  • Uncertainty for governance and local administration - expanding Israeli enforcement in PA-administered areas may create legal and operational confusion in areas such as water management, environmental regulation and protection of archaeological sites.
  • Market and investment implications in construction and real estate - accelerated settlement-related policy changes and international responses could influence investment decisions and risk assessments tied to land and development projects in the West Bank.

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