The Jerusalem Post

Netanyahu pledges sovereignt­y,

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Ministers gave their initial approval for the creation of a new settlement during a first-ever cabinet meeting in the Jordan Valley, designed to symbolize Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s determinat­ion to annex all West Bank settlement­s.

“We will apply sovereignt­y in the Jordan Valley and the Northern Dead Sea as soon as the next government is establishe­d in the next Knesset,” Netanyahu told the ministers on Sunday as he sat under a white tent, set up especially for the meeting, next to the Jordan Valley monument for soldiers who died defending the area.

“Today I have appointed a working team led by the director-general of my ministry, Ronen Peretz, to formulate an outline for applying sovereignt­y to the Jordan Valley and the northern Dead Sea,” Netanyahu said. He also promised to submit an extensive plan to develop Jordan Valley infrastruc­ture and transporta­tion.

It was Netanyahu’s last cabinet meeting before the election, and possibly his last as prime minister should he fail to secure enough votes to form a new government.

He chose a spot for the meeting that was symbolic of where he wants to lead his new government, by taking the unusual step of holding a government­al meeting in the West Bank outside the boundaries of sovereign Israel. The last time such a meeting was held was in December 2001, in a military base in the Binyamin region.

“This is a historic moment,” Likud Science and Technology Minister Ofir Akunis told The Jerusalem Post after the meeting, standing not far from the spot in the Jordan Valley where the Jews first crossed into the Land of Israel in Biblical times. “This is our land. This is an ancient land of the people of Israel.

“We are here not only with a cabinet meeting, but with a decision about a new settlement not far from here, Mevo’ot Yericho,” said Akunis, who has long been a supporter of Jordan Valley sovereignt­y. “This is the first step toward Israeli sovereignt­y on the Jordan Valley.”

Netanyahu’s government had already been in the middle of transformi­ng the unauthoriz­ed Mevo’ot Yericho outpost – consisting of over 30 families, first built in 1999 – into a new neighborho­od of the Yitav settlement. Sunday’s government decision opened the door to upgrading its status as a new Jordan Valley settlement.

“The final decision [to authorize the settlement] will only be advanced in the next government,” the Prime Minister’s Office said. “Needless to say, this holds for all the procedures which need to be executed.”

Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit had initially refused to support the Mevo’ot Yericho vote, and accused Netanyahu of using the cabinet meeting to advance his personal electoral agenda.

Mandelblit rescinded his objection, however, after he was presented with new informatio­n, presumably with regard to US President Donald Trump’s peace plan, which showed that there was a diplomatic urgency with regard to the vote to legalize the outpost. The attorney-general said that under these circumstan­ces such a vote could be taken.

During the cabinet meeting, Netanyahu spoke of three strategic announceme­nts he had made in the last week as the election campaign draws to a close.

The first, he said, was Trump’s pledge of a mutual defense treaty between the two countries, which would be significan­t in deterring threats against the Jewish state.

“Over the weekend, I spoke with my friend President Trump,” Netanyahu said. “We agreed to advance a historic defensive alliance between the US and Israel at our upcoming meeting at the UN General Assembly. This is historic because it adds a powerful component of deterrence against our enemies, alongside maintainin­g the ability to act, and freedom of action, of our forces. On this we will always insist, and it will always be in this defensive agreement just as it has entered into the other defensive agreements.”

The second step, Netanyahu said, was his pledge – upon formation of a new government – to annex 31 settlement­s, including 22 in the Jordan Valley, five in Megilot, and four in the Binyamin region of the West Bank.

“I am proud to convene this special cabinet meeting in the Jordan Valley,” said Netanyahu. “This is not only the eastern gate of the State of Israel; it is a defensive wall from the east because the Jordan Valley, together with the areas that control it – which will be part of the State of Israel – ensure that the IDF will be here forever. Instead of having a state that is only a few kilometers wide, this will be a state with strategic depth and strategic height.”

The third step he has taken, Netanyahu said, was his promise to annex all of the West Bank settlement­s, including those in isolated areas.

Netanyahu has attempted in the last week to turn the election into a mandate for his annexation plan, asking voters who support the plan to vote for him, explaining that he believes it can be done in conjunctio­n with Trump’s peace plan, known as the “Deal of the Century.”

Netanyahu said he would be “applying Israeli sovereignt­y over all of the communitie­s in Judea and Samaria, both in those blocs – including the area of the blocs – and also those outside the blocs, as well as additional areas that are vital for our security and for ensuring our heritage. These things will come up in the plan of the century; it will come very fast after the election.”

Transporta­tion Minister Bezalel Smotrich, whose Yamina Party wants to annex all of Area C, pressed Netanyahu at the meeting about problems with his sovereignt­y plan. He asked what would happen to the territory in Area C that is between the settlement­s.

Jordan Valley Regional Council head David Elhayani profusely thanked Netanyahu and even hugged him. Elhayani said that this had been one of the most “important and emotional weeks” in the 11 years he has been in office.

While political pundits in Israel dismissed Netanyahu’s statements, the Palestinia­n Authority slammed the Jordan Valley meeting and the Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n (OIC) held an emergency meeting on Sunday about the annexation pledge.

PA Foreign Minister Riad al-Maliki told the OIC that united action was needed to combat this threat.

“We must work collective­ly and united at all internatio­nal levels and with the internatio­nal community to push them to shoulder their responsibi­lities and implement the internatio­nal will.”

The left-wing NGO Peace Now said that if the Mevo’ot Yericho settlement was developed, it would block the expansion of the northern section of Jericho.

“This official establishm­ent of another settlement proves yet again that the government is unencumber­ed by the thought of internatio­nal backlash or the end to Israeli democracy on its way to annex Area C,” Peace Now said. “The government continues to show blatant disregard for reaching a two-state conflict-ending agreement with the Palestinia­ns. Instead, it prefers to take new strides in formalizin­g the acquisitio­n of occupied territory, and to control the area’s resources while permanentl­y keeping the Palestinia­n population confined without full rights in isolated cantons.”

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu meets with residents of Mevo’ot Yeriho after holding a weekly cabinet meeting in the Jordan Valley yesterday.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu meets with residents of Mevo’ot Yeriho after holding a weekly cabinet meeting in the Jordan Valley yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel