The Jerusalem Post

‘Trump’s plan a game changer on territory, security,’

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

US President Donald Trump’s peace plan is the first time since the 1993 Oslo Accords that the paradigm of the peace process has been changed and that shift is in Israel’s favor, Major General (Ret.) Yitzhak “Jerry” Gershon told The Jerusalem Post.

“This is the first time since we signed the Oslo Agreement that [the US has] changed the paradigm of the negotiatio­n between us and the Palestinia­ns,” he said.

So when asked about Trump’s plan, he gave it his enthusiast­ic endorsemen­t.

“I support the Trump plan 100%,” he said, adding that it was “a game changer.”

Gershon spoke with the Post while on a tour of the West Bank to highlight the security significan­ce of the plan, as well as the importance of Israel’s ability to annex 30% of the West Bank. Gershon is one of a number of top IDF commanders and security personnel who have formed a group of some 1,000 members, known as Habithonis­tim, or “The Protectors of Israel” in English.

On Sunday, representa­tives of Habithonis­tim traveled to strategic areas in Samaria, met with Samaria Regional Council head Yossi Dagan and visited the Elon Moreh settlement, which is slated to be one of 15 Jewish communes that would become an enclave under the plan.

But while Dagan and others in the settler leadership are concerned with the plan’s downsides, Gershon and others in his group said the plan is too important to ignore.

The Oslo Accords were about Israeli concession­s, with the entire focus on what would Israel give up, he said.

Those accords created the first territoria­l shift in the status of the West Bank and Gaza since the 1967 Six-Day War, by dividing the territory into sections A, B and C. Under these terms Israel gave up 40% of the West Bank. That territory, Areas A and B, were transferre­d from Israeli military and civilian rule to the control of the Palestinia­n Authority, also created through the Oslo process, with the idea of more territoria­l concession­s in the future.

Trump’s plan says Israel no longer has to make territoria­l concession­s for peace, Gershon said. For the first time, there is a plan that asks what Israel’s national interests are.

Most significan­tly, he said, the plan recognizes the IDF must retain control of the West Bank That understand­ing creates an important change in the security paradigm, he said.

Gershon said he understood the concerns of the settlers, including their fear enclaves would exist under conditions that would make life unsustaina­ble. He also noted, however, it was his understand­ing the map was not final. “It’s an illusion to think that Israel will give up the Jordan Valley or the settlement­s in Judea and Samaria. This is the first time that we can start from that point and move forward. If the Palestinia­ns want to negotiate they are more than welcome, but if not, we won’t wait for them any more. This is the only plan that can secure peace and stability in the region,” he said.

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