The Palm Beach Post

U.S. warning to Israel signals new backpedali­ng by Trump

Washington again opposes annexing land on West Bank.

- By Josef Federman Associated Press

JERUSALEM — The Trump administra­tion has explicitly warned Israel against annexing parts of the occupied West Bank, saying it would trigger an “immediate crisis” between the two close allies, Israel’s defense minister said Monday.

It was the latest indication that President Donald Trump is returning to more traditiona­l U.S. policy and will not give Israel free rein to expand its control over the West Bank and sideline the Palestinia­ns, as Israeli nationalis­ts had hoped.

Speaking in parliament, Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said U.S. officials had been clear in their opposition to Israeli annexation of West Bank land — a notion that has gained steam in farright Israeli c ircles since Trump’s election.

“We received a direct message — not an indirect message and not a hint — from the United States. Imposing Israeli sovereignt­y on Judea and Samaria would mean an immediate crisis with the new administra­tion,” Lieberman said, shortly before departing for a working visit to the U.S.

Judea and Samaria is the biblical term for the West Bank, which Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war. The Palestinia­ns seek the West Bank as the heartland of a future state, a position that has wide internatio­nal backing.

The angry U.S. reaction was sparked by comments by Miki Zohar, a junior lawmaker in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s nationalis­t Likud Party.

Zohar is among a growing number of coalition members who reject the internatio­nally backed idea of a Palestinia­n state and instead suggested that Israel annex the West Bank.

Under this version of a “one-state” scenario, the West Bank’s more than 2 million Palestinia­ns would receive expanded autonomy, but not hold full Israeli citizenshi­p or be allowed to vote for the Knesset, or parliament. Although Netanyahu has not endorsed the onestate vision, many in his coalition do.

“The two-state solution is dead,” Zohar told i24NEWS, an Israeli TV channel. “What is left is a one-state solution with the Arabs here as, not as full citizenshi­p, because full citizenshi­p can let them to vote to the Knesset.”

“They will be able to vote and be elected in their city under administra­tive autonomy and under Israeli sovereignt­y and with complete securit y control,” Zohar added.

Israeli doves believe such a scenario would be both immoral and suic idal by threatenin­g Israel’s Jewish and democratic character.

“One state at this moment means apartheid,” Ayman Odeh, leader of the Joint List of Arab parties in parliament, told foreign reporters Monday. “I think there needs to be great pressure for a Palestinia­n state to be establishe­d on the 1967 borders.”

Lieberman said he received phone calls “from the entire world” about whether Zohar’s proposal reflected the government’s position.

He c alled on the coalition to “clarify very clearly that there is no intention to impose Israeli sovereignt­y.”

Just i c e Mini s ter Ayelet Shaked, who supports a partial annexation of the West Bank, said she was unaware of any controvers­y with the Trump administra­tion and that Israel in any case is free to do as it sees fit.

“We a re n o t a b a n a n a republic. We are an independen­t and sovereign state,” she told Israel’s Army Radio station. “There is a supportive administra­tion in the United States. That administra­tion needs to back up the state of Israel and the government’s policy.”

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