Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Jordanian king tells senators annexation plans threaten regional stability

Jordan’s King Abdullah II on Tuesday warned US lawmakers that  Israel’s plan to annex parts of the West Bank was “unacceptable” and would undermine regional stability.
Abdullah spoke with US senators and emphasized the kingdom’s commitment to the establishment of an independent Palestinian state.
“Any unilateral Israeli measure to annex lands in the West Bank is unacceptable and undermines the prospects of achieving peace and stability in the region,” the royal court said in a statement.
The Jordanian monarch is speaking to US lawmakers and several congressional committees this week to voice his opposition to Israel’s plans.
On Wednesday he is scheduled for video appearances with the Senate Foreign Relations and House Foreign Affairs committees.
Abdullah, who has previously hinted that Jordan could tear up the peace deal with Israel if the plans go ahead, has reportedly refused to take phone calls from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The report Monday by the Palestinian Ma’an news agency would seem to mark a new low in Israel-Jordan ties, which have been tested repeatedly in recent years.
There was no confirmation from official Jordanian or Israeli sources.
According to the report, which cited a Jordanian official, Amman is also refusing to set a date for a meeting with Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz to discuss the annexation plans and the Trump administration’s peace plan.
Gantz has sought to coordinate implementing the Trump plan with a wider range of allies than the US, but Jordan has vociferously rejected annexation, with the king warning it could lead to a “massive conflict.”
Jordan is one of two Arab countries that has official diplomatic ties with Israel, along with Egypt.
Under a coalition deal between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Blue and White leader Gantz signed last month, the government can pursue annexation of all the settlements and the Jordan Valley — the 30% of the West Bank allocated to Israel under the Trump administration peace plan — from July 1. The Trump administration has indicated it will not oppose Netanyahu’s declared plans to do so, providing Israel accepts its “Peace to Prosperity” plan, which conditionally provides for a Palestinian state on the remaining 70% of the territory. READ MORE