Israel PM adviser says road to deal on Saudi ties is 'still long'
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[July 31, 2023]
JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu's national security adviser on Monday said the road to
normalizing ties with Saudi Arabia was "still long" while members of his
hard-right cabinet ruled out concessions to Palestinians as part of any
deal.
U.S. officials have sought for months to reach what would be a historic
agreement that Netanyahu has said would be a huge step toward ending the
Arab-Israeli conflict but that Riyadh has signaled would rest on
Palestinian statehood.
U.S. President Joe Biden last week dispatched his national security
adviser to Riyadh to discuss a possible deal, and on Friday said a
rapprochement was "maybe under way".
"I can identify with what the United States president said in an
interview a few days ago, where he said that the road is still long but
that he thinks there will be a possibility of progress," national
security adviser Tzachi Hanegbi told public broadcaster Kan, adding that
Israel is not involved in the U.S.-Saudi discussions.
"I can say that Israel will not give in to anything that will erode its
security," he added.
Asked whether this included Riyadh establishing a civilian nuclear
program on its soil, he said that for that, Israel's consent was not
needed.
"Dozens of countries operate projects with civilian nuclear cores, and
with nuclear endeavors for energy, this is not something that endangers
them nor their neighbors."
PALESTINIAN CONCESSIONS
The idea of Israel and Saudi Arabia formally cementing ties has been
under discussion since the Saudis gave their quiet assent to Gulf
neighbours United Arab Emirates and Bahrain establishing ties with
Israel in 2020.
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Flags of Saudi Arabia and Israel stand
together in a kitchen staging area as U.S. Secretary of State Antony
Blinken holds meetings at the State Department in Washington, U.S.,
October 14, 2021. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/Pool/ File Photo
But on Monday a member of a key party in Netanyahu's hard-right
government rejected any concessions toward the Palestinians as part
of a pact.
"We certainly won't agree to such a thing," National Missions
Minister Orit Strock told Kan.
"We are done with withdrawals. We are done with freezing settlements
in Judea and Samaria," Strock said, using the biblical term for the
West Bank.
Though it was unclear whether Strock was speaking on behalf of her
entire party, such a position would pose a political obstacle for
Netanyahu, who has cast the normalization of ties with Saudi Arabia
as a major foreign policy goal.
Her remarks were echoed by the head of another government member,
National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir who heads the far-right
Jewish Power party. He told Army Radio that he has nothing against
diplomatic deals with Arab countries.
"But if this deal includes concessions to the (Palestinian)
Authority, handing over territory, arming the Authority or giving
... terrorists power then I surely object."
U.S.-Israel ties have been strained in recent months by the
government's expansion of Jewish settlements on land that the
Palestinians seek for a state and by contentious judicial changes
pursued by Netanyahu's nationalist-religious coalition.
(Reporting by Maayan Lubell and Ari Rabinovitch; Editing by Conor
Humphries)
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