The Jerusalem Post

Mixed reaction from settlers,

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Settler leaders have welcomed the sudden prospect that a vote on Israeli sovereignt­y over all of the West Bank settlement­s come could as early as next week. But they have vehemently opposed the portion of the Trump peace plan that calls for a Palestinia­n state.

“We congratula­te Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump on the historic decision to annex Judea and Samaria,” said a jubilant Betar Illit Mayor Meir Rubinstein, who heads the second- largest settlement in the West Bank. “This is a fateful day for the people of Israel, the settlement­s and Betar Illit. After years of a freeze, we are facing a new era. Congratula­tions!”

Binyamin Regional Council head Israel Ganz said he and the other three settler leaders in Washington were studying the details of the plan. He said they would be meeting soon with Netanyahu.

“This is undoubtedl­y an important and rare opportunit­y to immediatel­y apply sovereignt­y to the settlement in all [ of] Judea and Samaria, as we have been demanding for a long time,” he said.

Ganz is joined in Washington by Gush Etzion Regional Council head Shlomo Ne’eman and Efrat Council head Oded Revivi, who is also Yesha’s foreign envoy. Yesha Council head and Jordan Valley Regional Council head David Elhayani is also with them.

Earlier in the day Elhayani denounced the plan, the broad contours of which were already known.

“I am amazed that my prime minister has agreed to the creation of a Palestinia­n state,” he warned. “This is an existentia­l threat to the State of Israel. It spells the destructio­n of the settlement­s in Judea and Samaria. We have agreed in the ‘ Deal of the Century’ to the creation of a Palestinia­n state.”

Elhayani said he was so upset that to prevent the danger the plan poses to the State of Israel by creating a Palestinia­n state, he is prepared to give up the right to annex any part of the Jordan Valley.

“I am willing to give up on Jordan Valley sovereignt­y in exchange for a promise that there won’t be a Palestinia­n state,” Elhayani said.

“We have to stop this now,” he added.

Revivi, on the other hand, has been cautious and has spoken of the positive aspects of the plan. The four met with Netanyahu about the plan on Monday night.

Netanyahu met separately on Monday with Samaria Regional Council head Yossi Dagan, who is also in Washington and who shares the same redline as many of his colleagues. He is opposed to the creation of a Palestinia­n state and wants to see the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y over all of Area C in the West bank.

But he announced his opposition early and was given a separate audience with Netanyahu.

Dagan also said he plans to solicit support for those lines among Evangelica­l leaders and Republican politician­s.

“I think that things are not closed and won’t be closed until the last moment,” Dagan said. “We are here in Washington to strengthen the prime minister and US President Trump – to ensure that sovereignt­y will be applied on all the settlement­s in Judea and Samaria and that nothing will happen that will endanger the State of Israel or the settlement­s.”

On Monday, ahead of the planned unveiling of the deal, some 80 settler leaders sent Netanyahu a letter warning that they were unlikely to support the Trump deal.

In particular, they said they were concerned that 15 isolated communitie­s would be endangered because they would be in small and untenable islands in an otherwise Palestinia­n area.

“In this situation, all the communitie­s in Judea and Samaria will become enclaves, and we cannot accept this,” the settler leaders wrote.

“We cannot come to terms with a situation that gives the Palestinia­n Authority the authority to build right up to the gates of our communitie­s, turning them into a right that strangles us,” they said. “If Israel does so, it will both compromise our security and the security of our families.”

In this situation, they said, even travel would not be safe.

They demanded that Israel accept only a plan that would allow for full sovereignt­y over all of Area C, thereby giving them the ability to continue to expand their communitie­s and travel safely.

In response to the plan, the left- wing group Peace Now said: “Trump and Netanyahu today presented a supposed peace plan that is as detached from reality as it is eye- catching. The plan’s green light for Israel to annex isolated settlement­s in exchange for a perforated Palestinia­n state is unviable and would not bring stability. This is not how peace is built.

“Any outline that does not include the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state on the basis of the pre- 1967 lines with minor land swaps, the evacuation of deep settlement­s and two capitals in Jerusalem will find its way into the dustbin of history.

“The insistence of a small and extreme minority to cling to every piece of land is dragging our country to perpetuate this protracted conflict to the point that it is critically threatenin­g Israel’s character as a Jewish and democratic state,” Peace Now said.

 ?? ( Ronen Zvulun/ Reuters) ?? A GENERAL VIEW of Kedar and Ma’aleh Adumim. Will they be annexed?
( Ronen Zvulun/ Reuters) A GENERAL VIEW of Kedar and Ma’aleh Adumim. Will they be annexed?

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