Bennett says he won’t sit down with Mahmoud Abbas, rules out Palestinian state
Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said on Tuesday that for now, he has ruled out a meeting with Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas and the creation of a Palestinian state.
“My perception is different than that of the defence minister although we work in harmony. I oppose a Palestinian state, and I think it would be a grave mistake to import the failed Gaza model of Hamas, which shoots rockets at us and turn the entire West Bank into that,” he told Ynet in an interview.
“I see no logic in meeting Abbas when he’s suing our soldiers in The Hague and accuses our commanders of war crimes. In m opinion, the Palestinian Authority is a failed entity,” he said.
He also noted the P.A.’s “pay-for-slay” program, in which the Palestinian leadership pays monthly stipends to terrorists who are killed or imprisoned for carrying out attacks against Israelis through its Palestinian Authority Martyrs’ Fund.
Israel’s Defense Minister Benny Gantz met with Abbas last month in Ramallah in the first official high-level talks between Israeli and Palestinian leaders since 2010. He told Abbas that the Jewish state “seeks to take measures that will strengthen the P.A.’s economy,” according to a Defense Ministry statement.
Bennett also stated his opposition to reopening the U.S. General Consulate in eastern Jerusalem, stating: “Jerusalem is the capital of the State of Israel and no other country.”
JNS