kayhan.ir

News ID: 70363
Publish Date : 11 September 2019 - 21:55
Citing Trump’s Support, Netanyahu Brazenly Announces:

Annexation of West Bank

BEIRUT (Dispatches) -- Arab and Muslim countries Wednesday led a wave of outcry after Zionist PM Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to annex a key part of the occupied West Bank if re-elected.
Netanyahu's controversial pledge involves extending Tel Aviv’s "sovereignty” to the Jordan Valley and the northern Dead Sea which account for one-third of the West Bank if he wins next week's elections.
The pre-election promise late Tuesday drew immediate condemnation from Arab powerhouses with many warning of disastrous consequences for the so-called Israeli-Palestinian peace process.
"The announcement constitutes a dangerous development and a new Israeli aggression," Arab foreign ministers said after an Arab League meeting in Cairo.
They also warned in a statement of "the ramifications of these dangerous, illegal and irresponsible" moves saying it would "undermine the chances of progress in the peace process".
Jordanian and Palestinian officials said any such measure risks "killing off" and "destroying" the entire "peace” process, which has failed to make any progress for years.
Damascus "strongly condemned" Netanyahu's vow, with a Syrian foreign ministry source telling the state news agency SANA that it was an "expansionist" plan which would be a "flagrant violation" of international treaties.
The Zionist regime occupied the West Bank in the 1967 Six-Day War in a move never recognized by the international community. It also seized -- and later annexed -- part of the Golan Heights from Syria, and the two sides remain technically at war.
Saudi Arabia flagged the announcement as a "dangerous escalation", calling for an "emergency meeting" of the foreign ministers of the 57 member states of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC).
Beyond the Arab world, Turkey slammed Netanyahu pledge as "racist".
Turkey would "defend (the) rights and interests of our Palestinian brothers and sisters till the end," said Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.
The United Nations remonstrated that Netanyahu's plan would have no "international legal effect." Meanwhile, the European Union said the pledge undermines any prospects for "peace”.
"The policy of settlement construction and expansion... is illegal under international law and its continuation, and actions taken in this context, undermine the viability of the two-state solution and the prospects for a lasting peace," an EU spokesperson said in a statement.
When announcing his pledge, Zionist prime minister said he would take the step in coordination with his ally, U.S. President Donald Trump.
The occupying regime of Israel has enjoyed a strong U.S. support under the Trump administration which in a highly controversial move overturned decades of U.S. policy to recognize the holy city of Jerusalem Al-Quds as the so-called capital of the Zionist regime in 2017.
Earlier in 2019, Trump also declared Israeli control over the Golan Heights, which the occupying regime seized in the 1967 Six-Day War, along with the West Bank and East Jerusalem Al-Quds.
More than 600,000 Zionist settlers now live in the West Bank and annexed East Al-Quds, among three million Palestinians.
Arab and Muslim leaders have unanimously decried the U.S. moves backing Netanyahu's policies, but done little to challenge them.
They have instead insisted on achieving a so-called two-state solution and establishing a Palestinian state based on the borders of 1967 with East Al-Quds as its capital.
Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner has been tasked with hammering out a plan to purportedly resolve the bitter Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but the plan has been dismissed a sell-out of the Palestinian cause.
The plan's economic aspects were unveiled at a Bahrain conference in June, floating the prospect of pumping some $50 billion worth of investment into a stagnant Palestinian economy.
It failed however to address key Palestinian demands such as the establishment of their own independent state. It remains unclear when Kushner's full plan will be rolled out with the Israeli elections looming on September 17.