The Jerusalem Post

Bennett backs away from opposition to Trump plan

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Yamina Party head Naftali Bennett backed away on Monday from open opposition to US President Donald Trump’s peace plan until all its details are finalized.

“Once the map and the plan are finalized we will make our decision,” Bennett said, adding that the opportunit­y for sovereignt­y was historic but that the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state would be an existentia­l threat to the State of Israel.

Bennett spoke out less than a week after he had slammed the plan. His earlier rejection was based on opposition to the creation of a Palestinia­n state and informatio­n he said he had received that the US map for the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y was finalized, and that no changes could be made.

The settler leadership had warned that the map contained details that would create a de facto building freeze and lead to the destructio­n of at least 15 settlement­s.

In an interview in the Makor Rishon newspaper published Thursday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu clarified that the map was not finalized and added that he had no plans to bring the issue of Palestinia­n statehood to a vote.

The informatio­n that the map is not finalized and Netanyahu’s decision to focus any government and Knesset vote solely on the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y has temporaril­y quelled some of the opposition, including on Bennett’s part.

“Asserting Israeli sovereignt­y over parts of the land of Israel is a historic act,” said Bennett who was one of the first high-level politician­s to support sovereignt­y, putting forward a plan already in 2012 for Israel to annex the entirety of Area C, where all the Israeli settlement­s are located.

But Bennett cautioned, “founding a Palestinia­n terrorist state in the heart of Israel is an existentia­l disaster.”

The Trump plan calls for a demilitari­zed Palestinia­n state in 70% of the West Bank.

“We don’t know yet the details of the plan or the map – is it sovereignt­y or Palestine,” Bennett said, adding that, “We’re working to influence it, and bring [about] applying good Israeli sovereignt­y, one that we could support wholeheart­edly.”

He made his comments in Hebrew and English and took a moment to thank Trump for his efforts on behalf of the State of Israel.

“President Trump has proven to be huge friend of the State of Israel [as a result of] his actions, including the recognitio­n of Jerusalem and of the Golan Heights. We’re profoundly thankful for that,” Bennett explained prior to a meeting between his Knesset faction and the Yesha Council.

Yamina faction head MK Ayelet Shaked was more critical and called on Netanyahu to provide informatio­n on the sovereignt­y map.

“We are once again asking Netanyahu to show us the map. He must do everything possible to ensure that the map is changed, so that Israel has [territoria­l] contiguity and the Palestinia­ns are in the enclaves and not as the situation is today, with Palestinia­n [territoria­l] contiguity and Israeli enclaves,” she said.

“We will support the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y but not the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state,” Shaked added.

Yesha Council head David Elhayani showed Yamina the map of the Trump plan as it was initially unveiled in January, so he could explain the dangers hidden in the plan.

Elhayani, who is also the head of the Jordan Regional Council, said that as the settler leader with the “most to lose,” his motto was still: “no to the Trump plan, no to a Palestinia­n state and yes to sovereignt­y.”

Binyamin Regional Council head Israel Ganz underscore­d his concern about the plan, noting that it didn’t just pose a danger to thousands of settlers “but to the nation of Israel as a whole.”

In the Knesset plenum, Yisrael Beytenu head Avigdor Liberman, who supports sovereignt­y, said he was skeptical that Netanyahu planned to move ahead with annexation.

“Who has seen the maps?” asked Liberman, noting that talks about the map have been going on for months. None of the top brass in the IDF, not the head of the Shin Bet and not the chief-of-staff have seen the maps, Liberman said.

“What annexation are we speaking about, who is going to execute this, someone has to, so I am doubtful this will happen,” he added.

 ?? (Ronen Zvulun/Reuters) ?? EFRAT IN the Gush Etzion bloc. The Trump plan calls for a demilitari­zed Palestinia­n state in 70% of the West Bank.
(Ronen Zvulun/Reuters) EFRAT IN the Gush Etzion bloc. The Trump plan calls for a demilitari­zed Palestinia­n state in 70% of the West Bank.

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