Israel has approved a controversial plan to register lands in the occupied West Bank as “state property.” This decision revives land title settlements frozen since 1967 and has drawn sharp criticism from Palestinian leaders and many countries. The Palestinian presidency called it a “grave escalation and a flagrant violation of international law,” calling it “de facto annexation.” Hamas condemned it as an attempt to “steal and Judaise lands.” Egypt labeled the move a “dangerous escalation.” Qatar’s Foreign Ministry urged global action to stop this “illegal” plan. Jordan asked the international community to stop Israel’s “dangerous escalation.” Saudi Arabia said the plan breaks international law and threatens peace. Kuwait called the move “null and void” and warned it could ruin efforts for a two-state solution. Pakistan condemned the attempt to turn West Bank land into Israeli state property and expand illegal settlements. The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation called it a colonial measure against Palestinian rights. The European Union warned this move is a “new escalation” and illegal under international law. An EU spokesman demanded Israel reverse the decision to avoid further conflict. Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the plan aims for “transparent and thorough clarification of rights” to resolve legal disputes caused by unlawful land registrations under the Palestinian Authority. But critics see it as a step to impose Israeli control and weaken Palestinians’ self-determination. Regional and global voices unite in condemning the decision as a serious threat to peace and the two-state solution.