After Trump's Middle East Plan, Israel Defence Chief Wants to Extend Sovereignty to Illegal West Bank Settlements
After Trump's Middle East Plan, Israel Defence Chief Wants to Extend Sovereignty to Illegal West Bank Settlements
Israel Defence Minister Naftali Bennett said that history had given Israel a one-time opportunity to apply Israeli law to the West Bank settlements, which he described with Hebrew names

Jerusalem: Israel's defence minister Naftali Bennett called on Wednesday for Israel to establish sovereignty over nearly a third of the occupied West Bank. He was acting on US President Donald Trump's announcement of a Middle East peace plan, that Palestinians have branded as apartheid.

Bennett, a coalition partner in Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government, led Palestinians to say Trump's plan had given the green light for Israel to formally annex its Jewish settlements in the West Bank, occupied by Israel since the 1967 Middle East War.

Trump's plan envisages a two-state solution with Israel and a future Palestinian state living alongside each other, but with strict conditions. The plan also gave US recognition of Israel's West Bank settlements -- deemed illegal under international law -- Israeli sovereignty over the Jordan Valley, and a redrawn, demilitarised Palestinian state that would meet Israel's security requirements.

With Netanyahu still attending the plan's presentation in Washington, Bennett outlined his hardline interpretation of what the White House had offered Israel. "Last night history knocked on the door of our home and gave us a one-time opportunity to apply Israeli law on all settlements in Samaria, Judea, the Jordan Valley and the northern Dead Sea," Bennett said, using the Hebrew names for areas in the West Bank occupied by Israel.

He had ordered a team to be set up to apply Israeli law and sovereignty on all Jewish settlements in the West Bank. It was unclear whether the present caretaker government had a legal mandate to carry out such a move, after two inconclusive elections in 2019. Bennett is vying with Netanyahu for support from right-wing voters in an election set for March 2.

Netanyahu on Wednesday reiterated his support for Trump's plan, telling Fox television: "We will not contradict in any way the outline that the president put forward." However, Amir Peretz, head of Israel's leftist Labour Party, said that no unilateral plan could work. "Now more than ever it's clear that we need a diplomatic compass," he said.

Israel's military issued a statement saying that based on an assessment of the situation, it was reinforcing divisions for the West Bank and Gaza with additional combat troops.

Meanwhile, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas called Trump's plan the "slap of the century" after it was announced.

Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said on Wednesday that Trump's team had simply "copied and pasted" the blueprint that Netanyahu and Israeli settler leaders wanted to see implemented.

"It's about annexation, it's about apartheid," he said in Ramallah in the West Bank. "Moving to the de jure annexation of settlements is something that was given the green light yesterday."

The Palestinians could push for a UN condemnation of the plan. Israel's UN mission signalled on Tuesday it would work to thwart this in a diplomatic campaign with the United States.

Gaza political analyst Talal Okal said the deal gave Israel the right to take what it wanted "immediately, while the Palestinians have to wait four years to see whether they have rights or not".

Amos Yadlin, a former Israeli head of military intelligence said that because the plan included mention of a two-state solution, it could still cause problems for Netanyahu among his right-wing allies.

Bennett seemed to confirm this, saying: "The Israeli government will not recognise a Palestinian state."

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