The Jerusalem Post

PM: Land swaps with PA won’t bring peace

‘When we left Gaza, they wanted to throw us out of Tel Aviv’

- • By ARIEL WHITMAN

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insisted on Tuesday that any future peace agreement reached with the Palestinia­ns must include an Israeli military presence in the West Bank.

In an interview with Army Radio, Netanyahu said that “In any peace agreement we will have to maintain military control of all the territory west of the Jordan River. This is the truth and I will continue saying this truth.”

Netanyahu indicated that an Israeli military withdrawal from all areas of the West Bank would likely create a vacuum prone to takeover by extremists, who could pose a threat to Israeli security.

“Why is there no peace?” the premier asked rhetorical­ly. “It is not because of the territorie­s or the settlement­s. For about 50 years, from 1920 until 1967, we did not hold the territorie­s or have any settlement­s and they wanted to throw us out of Tel Aviv. When we left Gaza, they wanted to throw us out of Tel Aviv.”

“When I ask the Palestinia­n Authority if we were to agree to all your demands, would you relinquish your demand for the right of return of Palestinia­ns to Jaffa... They sit in their chair and refuse to answer the question.

“The root cause of the conflict was and still is the refusal of the Palestinia­ns to recognize the State of Israel as the nation state of the Jewish People under any borders. The moment we will point to this issue and demand a real change in this way of thinking, only then is there hope for real peace. You cannot build peace on the basis of a lie,” the premier added.

The comments came one day after Netanyahu said Israel does not have a “blank check” from the United States in the diplomatic realm, offering his first public statements on prospects of the two-state solution since US President Donald Trump visited Israel last week.

Netanyahu’s comments came at the weekly Likud faction meeting, against the background of comments from Likud MKs calling for Netanyahu to be more outspoken in opposition to a twostate solution.

The prime minister told the MKs that while Israel is a sovereign country that can make vmany decisions, and there is a great deal of understand­ing in Washington for many of Israel’s key positions, the country must proceed in the diplomatic process “wisely and responsibl­y” and those claiming that Israel has a “diplomatic blank check” are mistaken.

Netanyahu also said that Trump is determined to reach an agreement. In a speech in Italy before returning home vfrom his first overseas trip as president, Trump said that Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas “assured me that he is willing to reach for peace with Israel in good faith – and I believe him.” Likewise, he said, Netanyahu “assured me that he, too, was ready to reach for peace – he is a friend of mine, and he means it.”

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? BENJAMIN NETANYAHU
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) BENJAMIN NETANYAHU

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel