|  | 
| Goats graze near the Jewish settlement of Maale Adumim near Jerusalem 
December 1, 2012. Israel announced on Friday it was authorizing 3,000 
new settler homes in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Baz Ratner/REUTERS | 
  Has Israel's settlement expansion crossed a 'red line'?
   
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Israel's plan to move forward with controversial settlements in eastern Jerusalem – which it took in apparent retaliation for the 
Palestinian Authority's recent, successful pursuit of recognition as a 
United Nations nonmember observer state – is prompting an angry response, and likely "real action," from 
Europe.
 
Haaretz reports that 
Britain, France, and Sweden have all summoned Israel's respective ambassadors
 to their countries to condemn the Israeli plan to build 3,000 new 
settlement units in the "E1" bloc, a region in eastern Jerusalem, while 
Germany and 
Russia
 both called upon Israel to rethink its plans. And more serious action 
may be coming, including substantial economic reprisals, Haaretz adds.
“This time it won’t just be a condemnation, there will be real action taken against Israel,” a senior European diplomat said.
Sky
 News confirmed that the British government was considering severe 
actions over the matter, quoting sources in the Foreign Office on Monday
 as saying: "All options are on the table," adding that there was an 
"appetite for action" within the bureau, and that officials may consider
 "revisiting" or even suspending EU trade agreements with Israel, based on human rights clauses. ...
[Israeli
 Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu’s decision Friday to move ahead on 
planning in E1 and to build 3,000 housing units in the settlement blocs 
and in East Jerusalem, has apparently shocked the foreign ministries and
 the leaders in London and Paris.
 Not only do Britain and France view construction in E1 as a “red line,”
 they are reportedly angry because they view Israel as having responded 
ungratefully to the support the two countries gave it during the recent Gaza operation....READ MORE
 
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