by AP and Israel Hayom Staff
Netanyahu says Israel can't afford to repeat the mistake of withdrawing its presence completely from Gaza and letting Hamas overrun it.
Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu vowed on Wednesday to maintain a permanent Israeli
military force in the West Bank, saying that if it weren't for Israeli
troops stationed there, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas
would be "overrun in two minutes" by Hamas terrorists.
Addressing an assembly of the Jewish
Federation of North America, Netanyahu remarked that Israel doesn't have
the luxury of repeating the mistake it made in Gaza, where Hamas
violently seized control from Abbas after Israeli forces withdrew from
the coastal strip.
Asked about his vision for the West Bank,
Netanyahu said he preferred to avoid labels such as "Palestinian state."
But he did make clear his view that Abbas and his Palestinian Authority
owe their very existence to Israel's protection and directly benefit
from the presence of Israeli troops.
"They'd be overrun in two minutes. A couple
of years ago we uncovered a plot of 100 Hamas men to overthrow [Abbas].
Overthrow? Kill him. Not kill him politically. Kill him. So, if we
weren't there, they'd not be there, which is exactly what happened when
we left Gaza," Netanyahu said.
Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip in
2005, evacuating its settlements there and pulling back all its troops.
The following year, Hamas won parliamentary elections and a year after
that, it violently overthrew forces loyal to Abbas and has since ruled
the territory with an iron fist.
As part of interim peace deals in the
1990s, the West Bank was carved up into autonomous and semi-autonomous
Palestinian areas, known as Areas A and B, and Area C, which is under
exclusive Israeli control and home to dozens of Israeli settlements.
Previous peace talks have come to a deadlock over how much of the territory would become part of the future Palestinian state.
Nabil Abu Rudeineh, an Abbas spokesman,
said the only way to achieve peace and stability was through a
Palestinian state on the entire West Bank, with east Jerusalem as its
capital.
"Other than that, it is just excuses to
keep the occupation," he said, adding that continued occupation and
settlements "will only lead to instability and violence."
After years of rejecting the concept,
Netanyahu ultimately agreed to the idea of a demilitarized Palestinian
state in 2009. But he has since walked it back some, faced with pressure
from his more hard-line coalition partners.
Maintaining security control of the West
Bank is a longstanding position of Netanyahu. Israel continues security
cooperation with PA forces even though there haven't been serious peace
talks since Netanyahu took office in 2009. U.S. President Donald Trump,
however, has promised to present a far-reaching and much-awaited peace
plan of his own at some time.
Netanyahu's comments appeared to indicate how far he'd be willing to go if forced to compromise in the West Bank.
"They [Abbas' PA] were there in Gaza, they
had 15,000 armed men, Hamas had 3,000. Within a few days they kicked him
out and we can't afford that happening in Judea, Samaria, the West
Bank," he said. "We left Gaza. What happened? This tiny thumb became a
position of radical Islam supported by Iran and they fired 4,000
missiles on us."
While Israel and Hamas have waged three wars in Gaza over the past decade, the West Bank has remained relatively calm.
The PA Health Ministry said Israeli troops
shot and killed a 21-year-old Palestinian who threw stones at soldiers
during clashes Wednesday in the West Bank. The ministry said five other
rioters were wounded by live fire during confrontations with Israeli
soldiers in the village of Tamun.
The IDF said some 50 Palestinians
instigated a riot during a routine Israeli search for illegal weapons,
hurling rocks and fireworks at the troops. The troops responded with
riot dispersal means and live fire. The military said its searches
resulted in confiscating two improvised weapons.
AP and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/2018/10/25/netanyahu-if-not-for-israel-hamas-would-topple-abbas/
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