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The realignment plan () (originally known as the "convergence plan") is a plan that was formulated and introduced to the Israeli public by prime minister Ehud Olmert, in a number of media interviews during the election campaign for the 17th Knesset in 2006. Olmert stated that if he was elected prime minister, within four years he would remove Israeli settlements from most of Judea and Samaria (West Bank) and consolidate them into large groups of settlements near the 1967 border. The area of removal would correspond to the area east of the route of the West Bank barrier that was begun under his predecessor, Ariel Sharon, or a similar route with national consent and international legitimization.

During the election campaign, Olmert stated that in pursuing a realignment of settlements, he was operating in Sharon's spirit, and that if Sharon had been able to continue carrying out the duties of his office, he would have acted in a similar way. Sharon was officially still prime minster during the campaign, but due to a stroke suffered in January 2006, had ceased to carry out the duties of his office and was not a candidate in the election. Olmert was acting prime minister during the campaign as well as the leader of the Kadima party. Since Sharon's major stroke, which followed a less serious stroke in November 2005, he has been kept under careful sedation and therefore remains in a coma. He officially left office in April, replaced by Olmert.

Although the Hebrew name of the plan has not changed, the English name has been changed from "convergence" to "consolidation" and finally to "realignment", as the Washington Times and the "language maven" William Safire [http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/11/magazine/11wwln_safire.html?_r=1&oref=slogin have noted.

תכנית ההתכנסות

Israeli-Palestinian conflict | Politics of Israel

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Realignment plan".

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