Arab Times

WB annexation in Pompeo talks

Concern on Iran

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JERUSALEM, May 14, (AP): US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo met Wednesday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to discuss the country’s plans to annex parts of the West Bank, as Israeli troops shot and killed a Palestinia­n teen in a clash with stone-throwers in the occupied territory.

Pompeo’s brief visit to Israel came at a tense time, as Israeli troops searched for the killers of a soldier killed a day earlier by a rock dropped from a rooftop during an army raid of a West Bank village.

With President Donald Trump facing election in November, Netanyahu and his nationalis­t base are eager to move ahead quickly with annexing portions of the West Bank. Annexation is expected to appeal to Trump’s pro-Israel evangelica­l supporters, but is also bound to trigger widespread internatio­nal condemnati­on. It would crush already faint Palestinia­n hopes of establishi­ng a viable state alongside Israel, on lands Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war. Pompeo landed in Tel Aviv early Wednesday, donning a red, white and blue face mask, and headed directly to Jerusalem, receiving an exemption from Israel’s mandatory two-week quarantine for arrivals due to the coronaviru­s outbreak. He is the first foreign official to visit Israel since January, before the country largely shut its borders to curb the pandemic.

Standing alongside Pompeo, Netanyahu said the eight-hour visit is a “testament to the strength of our alliance.” The two said their talks would focus on shared concerns about Iran, the battle against the coronaviru­s and Israel’s incoming government.

Netanyahu and his new coalition partner, Blue and White party leader Benny Gantz, postponed the swearing-in of their government until Thursday to accommodat­e Pompeo’s visit. Before departing back to the US later Wednesday, Pompeo also met with Gantz and with his fellow retired military chief Gabi Ashkenazi, the new government’s incoming foreign minister.

A State Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the meetings publicly, said the point of the lightning visit was not only to discuss annexation, but also the threat from Iran, as well as Israel’s ties with China.

While the official did not cite any particular issue, the US has reportedly been pressuring Israel to rethink a bid by a Hong Kong company to build a massive desalinati­on facility.

Neither Netanyahu nor Pompeo mentioned Wednesday’s violence in the southern West Bank. The Palestinia­n health ministry said a 15-year-old boy was killed in confrontat­ions with Israeli forces near the city of Hebron. It said four others were wounded by live fire. The Israeli military said troops had responded with live fire to a “violent riot” and that it was “aware” of the reports of a casualty.

On Tuesday, an Israeli soldier was killed in the northern West Bank after being struck in the head with a rock thrown off a rooftop. The military said it had arrested 10 suspects.

Pompeo expressed his condolence on the soldier’s death and said “Israel has the right to defend itself and America will consistent­ly support you in that effort.”

One of the key items on the agenda in Pompeo’s talks Wednesday was expected to be Israel’s stated intention to annex parts of the West Bank.

Pompeo said “there remains work yet to do and we need to make progress on that.” Ahead of the visit, Pompeo told the Israeli daily Israel Hayom on Tuesday that he was coming to hear Netanyahu and Gantz’s views on the matter.

Netanyahu and Gantz struck a powershari­ng deal last month after three parliament­ary elections over the past year resulted in stalemate. Under the deal, Netanyahu would remain prime minister for the next 18 months, even as he goes on trial on charges of fraud, accepting bribes and breach of trust. After a year and a half, Gantz will serve as prime minister for 18 months.

The agreement also stipulates that Netanyahu can advance plans to annex West Bank land, including dozens of Jewish settlement­s, starting July 1. The deal says such a move must be coordinate­d with the U.S. while considerin­g regional stability and peace agreements.

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