Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Netanyahu feared allies, opposition leader says

- By Aron Heller

JERUSALEM — Israel’s opposition leader said Monday that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was ready to freeze settlement constructi­on in most of the West Bank and reach out to regional Arab nations but ultimately backed out for fear of losing his grip on power.

Isaac Herzog, head of the opposition Zionist Union, said he was prepared to join Netanyahu’s government based on a secret regional peace initiative brokered by then-U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry that would have limited settlement growth to just the major blocs that Israel is expected to keep in any peace accord. But he said the talks broke down when Netanyahu caved under pressure from his hard-line allies.

“Netanyahu fled away, turned his back as opposed to his commitment­s to third parties and simply reneged on the basic understand­ing that we had,” Herzog told participan­ts at the annual Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizati­ons gathering in Jerusalem. “History will judge Netanyahu on that failure.”

Herzog’s comments were the latest revelation­s about secret peace negotiatio­ns that have shaken up Israeli politics and raised new doubts over the genuinenes­s of Netanyahu’s stated commitment to pursuing Middle East peace, expressed most recently in a White House news conference last week with President Donald Trump.

Former American officials have confirmed a report Sunday in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz that Netanyahu turned down an offer that would have secured regional recognitio­n of Israel as a Jewish state — a key Netanyahu demand — alongside a renewal of peace talks with the Palestinia­ns with the support of the Arab countries.

Netanyahu took part in a summit that Kerry organized in the Jordanian city of Aqaba last February and included Jordan’s King Abdullah II and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah elSissi.

Netanyahu rejected the offer, which would have required a significan­t pullout from occupied land, saying he would not be able to garner enough support for it in his hard-line coalition government. Two former top aides to Kerry confirmed that the meeting took place secretly on Feb. 21, 2016.

Haaretz newspaper, which broke the story, said Netanyahu presented a five-point plan that would include advancemen­t of Palestinia­n economic projects, a freezing of constructi­on in isolated settlement­s and a positive reference to the 2002 “Arab Peace Initiative” — a Saudi-led plan that offered Israel peace with dozens of Arab and Muslim nations in return for a pullout from territorie­s captured in the 1967 Mideast war to make way for an independen­t Palestine.

Herzog said the summit formed the basis of his short-lived talks with Netanyahu to join the government, a plan that quickly unraveled when Netanyahu chose to bring in nationalis­t leader Avigdor Lieberman instead and appoint him defense minister.

Herzog confirmed that Netanyahu was willing to make the concession­s but cowed in the face of warnings from his own Cabinet ministers that he would lose his coalition and even the support of his own Likud Party. Herzog himself came under scathing criticism for his apparent groveling before Netanyahu, but now says his motives have been vindicated.

“I told Netanyahu ‘let’s go together, the country’s two big historic parties, to a tie-breaking move’ and he blinked and ran away,” Herzog told Israel’s Channel 10 TV Sunday night, saying such a union “would have changed the face of the Middle East.”

Herzog said Arab leaders in the region urged him to join the government.

The report and subsequent fallout has sparked renewed opposition attacks on Netanyahu.

Netanyahu did not address the report in his weekly Cabinet meeting Sunday.

 ?? JOSEPH NAIR/AP ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu didn’t address a report of secret peace talks at his most recent Cabinet meeting.
JOSEPH NAIR/AP Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu didn’t address a report of secret peace talks at his most recent Cabinet meeting.

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