EI -Ali Abunimah
Former World Bank president  and Middle East Quartet envoy James D. Wolfensohn is an investor in an  Israeli company that is developing transport infrastructure for  Jewish-only settlements built in the occupied West Bank in violation of  international law, an investigation by The Electronic Intifada reveals.
Wolfensohn provided some of the start-up capital for Better Place, a  company founded by Israeli entrepreneur Shai Agassi. The company owns  and operates Better Place Israel (BPI), a division which is establishing  a system of charging stations for electric vehicles throughout Israel  and for Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank.
The company has been a poster child for efforts to greenwash Israel --  presenting it as a haven for environmental technologies -- yet it has  close ties to Israel's military and political establishments and its  principal officers express an explicitly anti-Muslim and anti-Arab  agenda.
  
BPI's chief executive officer is former general Moshe Kaplinsky, who  commanded Israeli occupation forces in the West Bank during the second  Palestinian intifada, a period of massive, well-documented violations of  Palestinian human rights. Kaplinsky was also deputy chief of staff of  Israel's army during its 2006 war on Lebanon when Amnesty International  and other human rights groups charged that Israel committed numerous war  crimes including widespread use of cluster bombs in residential areas.
Better Place's goal is to bring fully-electric vehicles and the  infrastructure to support them to the mass market -- starting with  Israel. It also has pilot projects as far afield as Denmark, Canada,  California, Australia and Japan.
Specially-built electric cars, due to be available to the public in  Israel next year, are manufactured by French-Japanese conglomerate  Renault-Nissan under an agreement with Better Place. Better Place had  also recently signed a memorandum of understanding with Chinese car  manufacturer Chery to jointly develop electric car technology for the  Chinese market.
"What we do to make it convenient is we set [a] massive number of charge  spots across an entire country or entire region," Agassi explained to  the BBC World Service's One Planet program in January 2009.  "And we set up battery exchange systems so that wherever you drive you  don't need to sit and wait for your battery to charge, you can just swap  it and keep on going."
Building infrastructure in the occupied West Bank
Before BPI sells its first car in Israel it is establishing a network of  thousands of charging spots on the country's entire road system  including settler roads and in settlements in the West Bank...
One of the largest investors in BPI is billionaire Idan Ofer, owner of  Dor-Alon energy group, Israel's largest oil refiner. Dor-Alon has signed  an agreement to install Better Place charging and battery exchange  spots throughout its network of gas stations.
Israel's Hebrew-language financial publication Globes reported  on 3 February that "According to estimates, the deployment [of charging  stations] will stress the more extensive and popular refueling locations  of Dor-Alon, which enjoys a dominance on primary transportation routes,  such as its four stations on the Cross Israel road (Highway 6) and the  stations on Highway 443 and the Coastal Highway."
Highway 443, significantly, is a road used by thousands of Israeli  commuters daily. Half of the road's approximately 30-kilometer length  runs through the occupied West Bank. Israel has banned Palestinians  whose land and villages the road traverses from accessing it, reserving  it effectively for Jews only. Prior to Israel's seizure of the road, it  had been a main artery for Palestinian traffic south of Ramallah ("Route  443 -- West Bank road for Israelis only," B'Tselem).
The Electronic Intifada (EI) independently confirmed BPI's expansion  into the West Bank when it sent an undercover reporter to visit the  company's headquarters situated in a massive renovated fuel storage tank  in northern Tel Aviv.
During the tour, the EI reporter, along with other visitors, was shown  an IMAX-style video presentation which explained that each customer who  buys a BPI electric vehicle will also have a charging spot installed at  their home -- a short post with an outlet that connects to the car via a  nozzle-type input, and wirelessly links to the BPI communications  network.
When the EI reporter asked a BPI spokesperson if these charging stations  could be installed inside settlements in the West Bank, the  spokesperson said that they would be installed "anywhere ... that you  want to live." On a map shown during the video presentation, charging  stations were shown in areas in the Jordan Valley and along major routes  going east from Jerusalem -- indicating that BPI has already installed  charging stations inside the West Bank, and plans to install many more.
Wolfensohn an early booster of Better Place
James Wolfensohn's investment firm, Wolfensohn & Co., is listed on  BPI's website along with Australia-based firm Macquarie Capital and  US-based investment bank Morgan Stanley, among others as investors.  Macquarie invests in and operates transport infrastructure all over the  world, including the Chicago Skyway toll bridge, the Indiana Toll Road  and the M6 Toll motorway in the UK.
Contacted by EI, Wolfensohn & Co. declined to disclose the size of  its stake or provide any other comment for this story. Yet as one of the  first investors it may have been influential in helping BPI attract  additional capital.
BPI recently secured a $350 million equity investment from international  bank HSBC, expanding the company's estimated worth to $1.25 billion.
"Israel is a perfect test tube" for the electric car, Wolfensohn was  quoted as saying in the February 2008 issue of Israel High-Tech  & Investment Report. "It needs to be tested, and [BPI founder  Shai] Agassi is to be commended for testing it and the Israeli  government for trying it out."
While operating as a private company -- with its head office nominally  in California -- Better Place has been dependent on Israeli government  support from the start. Initially, Agassi wrote a concept paper for the  World Economic Forum's Young Global Leaders initiative. Agassi shopped  it to various world leaders but found no takers, he told the BBC's One  Planet. "Then President [Shimon] Peres of Israel picked up on it,"  Agassi recalled. "But the challenge to me was don't ask us to do it. If  you think it's such a great business, go do it yourself. And that's how  it became a company instead of a government agency." More recently  Agassi told CNN, "I would not be doing this today were it not for  [Peres]" ("Shai  Agassi: One man's mission to turn all cars electric," CNN, 19 April  2010).
Wolfensohn's investment in and personal endorsement of an Israeli  company that is helping to build and solidify the infrastructure of  occupation is surprising. Until 2006, Wolfensohn served as envoy for the  Quartet, the ad hoc, self-appointed committee of  representatives of the United States, the European Union, Russia and the  UN Secretary-General that has monopolized the so-called "peace  process." Wolfensohn was tasked with assisting Palestinian economic  development in the Gaza Strip after Israel removed its settlers in 2005  and moved its occupation forces from the interior to the perimeter of  the besieged territory that imprisons 1.5 million Palestinians, mostly  refugees.
Wolfensohn resigned in frustration after the Quartet decided to boycott,  and freeze aid to, the Palestinian Authority after Hamas won the  January 2006 election. "It would surprise me if one could win by getting  all the kids out of school or starving the Palestinians," Wolfensohn  said in a parting shot aimed at Israeli and Quartet policies ("West 'has  to prevent collapse' of Palestinian Authority," Financial Times,  3 May 2006).
Wolfensohn had previously been highly critical of severe movement  restrictions on Palestinians between and within the occupied territories  -- such as those along Highway 443 -- that have devastated the  Palestinian economy. Wolfensohn was succeeded as Quartet envoy by Tony  Blair.
Islamophobia under the guise of environmentalism
BPI's promotional video claimed that the funding of "extreme and  unstable regimes ... that fund organizations not positive for humanity"  is one of the major reasons the firm is interested in getting Israelis  out of their gas-guzzling cars and into fully-electric vehicles. Both  Israeli President Peres and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are shown  extolling the virtues of BPI's mission, with Netanyahu commenting that  this is a part of a "changing world order ... shaking off our dependence  on oil."
The canard that proceeds from the gasoline that motorists around the  world pump into their cars directly funds terrorism has become popular  with liberal environmentalists in recent years. While implicitly racist  toward Arabs and Muslims, BPI has made such prejudiced and inflammatory  claims an explicit part of its business model.
CEO Moshe Kaplinsky told the BBC's One Planet, "I was a general  in the IDF [Israeli army] and I understand where the money from the oil  is going and what it cause to our society in the Western side of the  globe [sic]."
When asked why he was an early booster of Better Place, Israeli  President Peres told Wired magazine, "I thought that the  greatest problem of our time was oil. Oil on one hand is polluting the  land, and on the other hand it's financing terror" ("Drive:  Shai Agassi's Audacious Plan to Put Electric Cars on the Road," 18  August 2008).
Rebranding Israel
Following the 11 September 2001 attacks in the US, Israeli companies  selling "security" and "anti-terrorist" expertise became an engine of  the country's exports. In the age of US President Barack Obama, and  concern about climate change, there has been a concerted effort to  soften Israel's image, especially in the wake of the UN-commissioned  Goldstone report into Israeli war crimes and crimes against humanity in  the Gaza Strip.
Better Place has become a flagship for this strategy -- the Reut  Institute's Gidi Grinstein, for example, used images of the Better Place  logo in his notorious powerpoint presentation at the Herzliya  conference, on efforts to rebrand Israel as Earth-friendly while urging  its intelligence agencies to "sabotage"  and "attack" the growing global Palestine solidarity movement.
The success of Better Place in raising money from Wolfensohn & Co.  and other international firms, as well as the positive publicity the  company has received, serve as warnings that Palestinians and the  growing global boycott, divestment and sanctions movement must be ever  more vigilant against Israel's efforts to disguise its illegal and  brutal colonization and apartheid behind a green mask.  Full story
 
 
 
 
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