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Arab nations condemn Netanyahu's West Bank annexation plan

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Arab nations have condemned a plan by Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu to annex part of the occupied West Bank.

On Tuesday Mr Netanyahu pledged to apply Israeli sovereignty over the Jordan Valley and northern Dead Sea if he is returned to office following a general election next week.

Officials in Jordan, Turkey and Saudi Arabia sharply criticised the announcement.

The Arab League denounced "the dangerous development" as "aggression".

Palestinian diplomat Saeb Erekat said such a move would be a "war crime" that would "bury any chance of peace".

Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu: Commando turned PMIsrael-Palestinian talks: Why fate of Jordan Valley is keyPalestinian territories profile

Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967 but has stopped short of annexation.

Palestinians claim the whole of the area for a future independent state. Mr Netanyahu previously insisted Israel would always retain a presence in the Jordan Valley for security purposes.

What did the Israeli PM say?

Mr Netanyahu, who was campaigning for the election, unveiled the plan in a televised address.

He also said he would annex all Jewish settlements in the West Bank, but this would need to wait until the publication of US President Donald Trump's long-awaited plan for a peace agreement between Israelis and Palestinians.

"There is one place where we can apply Israeli sovereignty immediately after the elections," Mr Netanyahu said about the Jordan Valley and northern Dead Sea. "If I receive from you, citizens of Israel, a clear mandate to do so."

The prime minister leads the right-wing Likud party who are currently neck and neck in the polls with the opposition centrist Blue and White party.

A snap general election is being held next Tuesday, after Mr Netanyahu earlier this year failed to successfully form a workable coalition government following another vote.

The BBC's Middle East Correspondent, Tom Bateman, says the prime minister's announcement is likely to help him shore up support on the political right.

Blue and White's co-leader, Yair Lapid, hit out at Mr Netanyahu, insisting he "doesn't want to annex territories, he wants to annex votes".

"This is an election trick and it's not even a particularly successful trick because the lie is so transparent," he said.

How have others responded?

The Arab League said Mr Netanyahu's plan would violate international law and "torpedo" the foundations of peace.

Senior Palestinian official Hanan Ashrawi told AFP news agency Mr Netanyahu was "not only destroying the two-state solution, he is destroying all chances of peace."

Jordan's Foreign Minister, Ayman Safadi, called the plan a "serious escalation" and warned it could "push the whole region towards violence".

Turkey's Foreign Minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, described the pledge as "racist" and criticised Mr Netanyahu for "giving all king of illegal, unlawful and aggressive messages" before the election.

Image copyrightREUTERSImage captionPalestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh called Mr Netanyahu a "prime destroyer of the peace process"

Saudi Arabia also condemned the announcement on state media as a "very dangerous escalation" and called for an emergency meeting of the foreign ministers of the 57 member states of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in response.

What is the background to the West Bank issue?

The Jordan Valley and northern Dead Sea area makes up about a third of the West Bank.

Israel occupied the West Bank, along with East Jerusalem, Gaza and the Syrian Golan Heights, in the 1967 Middle East war. It effectively annexed East Jerusalem in 1980, and the Golan Heights in 1981, although neither move was accepted internationally for decades.

The Trump administration has since recognised both steps, overturning previous US policy. It remains unclear if they will advocate for a two-state solution - a plan which has dominated previous international diplomatic efforts to achieve peace in the region.

The fate of the West Bank goes to the heart of the Israel-Palestinian conflict. Israel has built about 140 settlements there and in East Jerusalem which are considered illegal under international law, though Israel disputes this.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-49657915
 
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LOL! A condemnation is all they’ll do. I’d love to see these rich Arab nations do something once Israel annexes the West Bank.
 
Anything to win an election.

but hes not saying anything is he, last elections he said he would never allow a Palestinian state on his watch.

Again similar tactics were played with creation of Pakistan, east and west Pakistan which didnt share borders how can the state function? Eventually the two separated...

Same with Gaza and West Bank, how can it function? the two state solution is dead, time for the arabs to ask for equal rights and one state solution.
 
Not surprsing. Jews are not going to take some land when they believe God promised them all.

Its a slow process for the biblical Israel and the Messiah to return.

Israel doesn't exist to many Muslims and this area will be fought over until the last man standing on Earth. The holy land will change hands again in the future.
 
Saudi Arabia also condemned the announcement on state media as a "very dangerous escalation" and called for an emergency meeting of the foreign ministers of the 57 member states of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in response.

The Israelis must be quaking in their boots - an emergency OIC meeting has been called.
 
Not surprsing. Jews are not going to take some land when they believe God promised them all.

Its a slow process for the biblical Israel and the Messiah to return.

Israel doesn't exist to many Muslims and this area will be fought over until the last man standing on Earth. The holy land will change hands again in the future.

Theres a famous quote" Most Jews dont believe in god but they do believe he gave israel to them". :)
 
Israel doesn't exist to many Muslims and this area will be fought over until the last man standing on Earth. The holy land will change hands again in the future.

Do you have any 'wins' to report in present day?

*crickets*

Thought so.
 
Arab nations don't care about Palestine, if they do fate of Palestine would be different.
 
He does this every election cycle.

The sad part is that it resonates with the Israeli public. There is always a lot of talk of Muslim radicalisation but anyone who has studied human nature will tell you to subject a society to the demonisation of a people has a hugely detrimental effect on that society.

Israel is producing generation after generation of people who can rationalise the abuse of a group of people with a blink of an eye.

Ultimately, it’s the society that perpetuates it that is most hard hit by its consequences.
 
He will never try for peace because peace has no upside for him.

He loses everything.

A truly vile individual, who should be in the dock rather than the ballot.
 
The future looks bleak with or without Netanyahu. It's often said the youth are the most progressive generation but 64% of Israelis aged 18-34 identify as right wing !

The complete collapse of the Israeli left has led to pro-peace voices becoming marginalised.

The sad thing is the opposition leader Benny Gantz isn't exactly a dovish moderate. He boasted of sending Gaza back to the stone age under his watch and criticises Netanyahu only for not making this annexation pledge sooner.
 
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