The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘A big opportunit­y’

Netanyahu says he won’t miss chance at West Bank annexation

- JEFFREY HELLER REUTERS

JERUSALEM — Israel will not miss a “historic opportunit­y” to extend its sovereignt­y to parts of the West Bank, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday, calling the move one of his new government’s top tasks.

Palestinia­ns consider such a step as illegal annexation of occupied land they seek for a future state. Last week, they declared an end to security cooperatio­n with Israel and its ally, the United States, in protest at the territoria­l plan.

Netanyahu has pledged to put Jewish settlement­s and the Jordan Valley in the West Bank under Israeli sovereignt­y. He has set July 1 as a starting date for cabinet discussion­s on the issue, which has also raised alarm within the European Union.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has called the matter complex and said it required coordinati­on with Washington. Netanyahu’s new political partner, centrist Benny Gantz, has been equivocal about de facto annexation.

At a meeting of legislator­s of his right-wing Likud party on Monday, Netanyahu set land moves in the West Bank as “perhaps the first in importance in many respects” of the tasks to be undertaken by the government he and Gantz formed on May 17.

“We have a historic opportunit­y, which hasn’t existed since 1948, to apply sovereignt­y judiciousl­y as a diplomatic... step in Judea and Samaria,” he said, referring to the year of Israel’s birth and using the biblical names for the West Bank.

“It is a big opportunit­y and we will not let it pass by,” he said a day after the start of his corruption trial. He denies charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust.

Netanyahu has cited U.S President Donald Trump’s plan for Israeli-Palestinia­n peace as underpinni­ng de facto annexation. The Palestinia­ns have rejected the proposal, announced in January, under which most Jewish settlement­s would be incorporat­ed into “contiguous Israeli territory”.

Palestinia­ns and most countries view the settlement­s on land Israel took in the 1967 Middle East war as illegal. Israel disputes this. Israeli critics of annexation have voiced concern it could increase antiIsrael­i violence.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers a statement before entering the district court room where he is facing a trial for alleged corruption crimes, in Jerusalem May 24.
REUTERS Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers a statement before entering the district court room where he is facing a trial for alleged corruption crimes, in Jerusalem May 24.

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