The Jerusalem Post

PM vows to annex Jewish Hebron, Kiryat Arba

- • By GIL HOFFMAN and TOVAH LAZAROFF

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said publicly for the first time on Monday morning that if re-elected on Tuesday, he would annex Kiryat Arba and the Jewish areas of Hebron.

Speaking to Efi Triger on Army Radio’s “Good Morning Israel” program, Netanyahu went farther than he did just 11 days ago, when he visited Hebron and delivered a historic speech just outside the Tomb of the Patriarchs.

Expectatio­ns had been high that he would use the platform to declare his intention to apply Israeli sovereignt­y to the mostly Palestinia­n city, or at least to the 4% of the city of that includes the Tomb of the Patriarchs and the section where the Jewish community lives. But no such pledge was forthcomin­g. On Monday morning, however, with one day left to go until the election, Triger asked him: “Kiryat Arba and the Jewish community in Hebron will be annexed?”

Netanyahu responded: “Of course. They will be part of Israel. But I need a mandate to execute this plan.”

He told Army Radio that he had spoken of his sovereignt­y plan for West Bank settlement­s with US President Donald Trump.

“I said this to Trump: I plan to apply sovereignt­y on all of the settlement­s – including in the blocs, and the territory [around them] – and all the settlement­s and sites that have importance from a security or Israeli heritage perspectiv­e,” Netanyahu said.

“I said that no one will be uprooted, I won’t recognize the [Palestinia­n] right of return and I said that Jerusalem must remain united. All these things were said,” the prime minister added.

Netanyahu repeated for Triger something he has been saying for weeks: that Trump plans to release his peace plan to resolve the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict very soon after the election.

“We are determinin­g Israel’s final borders, so it has strategic depth and heights,” he said.

Last week, Netanyahu unveiled a plan to annex 31 West Bank settlement­s, including 22 in the Jordan Valley, five in the Megilot region of the Dead Sea and four in the Binyamin region of the West Bank. He said he would do so unilateral­ly as soon as a new government was formed and asked those who support such a plan to vote for him.

At the same time, he has said that he would apply sovereignt­y to all the West Bank settlement­s – but would do so as much as possible in conjunctio­n with Trump’s peace plan.

On Sunday, Netanyahu held a first-ever cabinet meeting in the Jordan Valley, in which he spoke of his sovereignt­y plan for the area. The cabinet in that meeting gave its initial approval to the creation of a new Jordan Valley settlement called Mevo’ot Yericho.

Netanyahu also spoke of his overall sovereignt­y plans for West Bank settlement­s. He did not clarify exact details of the plan, but has dropped informatio­n in various media interviews he has done over the last few days, including the Army Radio interview on Monday morning.

He also promised, in an Arutz 7 interview on Thursday, to apply sovereignt­y to the E1 area of Ma’aleh Adumim. US pressure has prevented Israel from building in that area for the last 25 years.

The Palestinia­ns hold that all that area from Jerusalem to the Dead Sea, including the Jordan Valley, is an essential part of their future state. They have been successful, particular­ly in persuading the US that E1 is an existentia­lly important territory for their state.

Netanyahu has in the past promised to build there, but has never done so. Now, in the final days to the election, he has added sovereignt­y over E1, along with the Jewish neighborho­od of Hebron, to the wish list he has promised right-wing voters.

 ?? (Emil Salman/Pool/Reuters) ?? PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife, Sara, visit the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron earlier this month.
(Emil Salman/Pool/Reuters) PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife, Sara, visit the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron earlier this month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel