The Jerusalem Post

Gantz to settlers: We must maintain Jordan peace deal

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Israel must ensure its 1994 peace deal with Jordan is preserved, Alternate Prime Minister Benny Gantz told settlers as he met with them to discuss annexation and the US peace plan.

“When we take diplomatic steps, we must pay careful attention to what is happening on the ground and in the area around us, including, for example, preserving Israel’s peace agreement with Jordan,” he said. “These agreements contribute greatly regional stability and all of our security.”

He also spoke of the importance of working in partnershi­p with the United States when it came to annexation.

“We will always work in full cooperatio­n with the Americans,” Gantz said. “I would like to emphasize here, the United States is our best friend in the world. It supports us with regard to strategic issues that impact our destiny and we will maintain this partnershi­p.”

Gantz said he was discussing with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu matters involving pending annexation plans and the Trump peace initiative.

“The prime minister and I are sitting together and discussing the different possibilit­ies within the diplomatic arena and I hope that we will be able to come to an agreement,” Gantz said.

He assured the settler leaders that irrespecti­ve of any sovereignt­y moves, Israel had a responsibi­lity to allow the residents in legal areas of Judea and Samaria to live a secure and normal life.

“It is important, moving forward,” he said, “that the unity of Israeli society is preserved in spite of the difference­s of opinion.” Preserving societal unity is the reasons he entered politics, Gantz explained to the settlers.

Gantz has had a lukewarm attitude to annexation, expressing both support for the Trump plan and concern for its impact on Jordan, which has warned that annexation would endanger the Israeli-Jordanian peace treaty. While Gantz supports placing portions of the West Bank territory within Israel’s sovereign territory, he has preferred to do so with internatio­nal agreement and through dialogue than unilateral­ly.

The Jerusalem Post reported on Monday that the US wants Gantz to agree to the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y to portions of the West Bank before it would allow Netanyahu to do so this summer.

According to a source at the meeting, Gantz told those in the meeting that, “a Mapainik once taught me: ‘take what you have been given and deal with the rest later.’” The source said he was left with the impression that Gantz wanted to advance sovereignt­y under the plan.

It’s a phrase that sums up the attitude of those among the settler leadership that support the Trump peace plan.

Present at the meeting were some 17 settlers leaders, including Yesha Council head David Elhayani and Samaria Regional Council head Yossi Dagan, who has opposed the Trump plan, and Efrat Council head Oded Revivi, who has supported it.

It was Gantz’s first meeting with the settler leadership since the formation of the government last month.

Elhayani spoke warmly of Gantz after meeting with the former IDF chief-ofstaff, and explained that while in that role, Gantz always had a good relationsh­ip with those in the settlement­s and understood their security needs.

 ?? (Ariel Hermoni/Defense Ministry) ?? ALTERNATE PRIME MINISTER Benny Gantz meets with 17 settler leaders, including David Elhayani, to his left, and Oded Revivi (1st row, left).
(Ariel Hermoni/Defense Ministry) ALTERNATE PRIME MINISTER Benny Gantz meets with 17 settler leaders, including David Elhayani, to his left, and Oded Revivi (1st row, left).

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