This chapter reflects on regimes of separation and movement regulation in occupied Palestine, and on the landscapes that support these regimes. It focuses upon the network of by-pass roads bisecting the West Bank, which connect up Israel with the Israeli settlements in that territory, and the prime interest is in the symbolic function of these roads. The chapter argues that they tell a particular kind of narrative about the relationship between Israelis and Palestinians, a narrative which speaks of the inevitability of separation between the two peoples just at a moment when the region is moving through what is presently known as a ‘peace process’. It stimulates reflection on the implications of, on the one hand, the erection of boundaries and strictures of movement in Israel/Palestine and, on the other, the possibilities and conditions of their dissolution.