This Israeli Lawmaker Can Stop Any Trump Peace Deal He Dislikes

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The new Israeli-Palestinian peace process hasn’t even started yet and it’s already facing hurdles.
Naftali Bennett, a minister crucial to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition, is threatening to use his party’s seats to topple the government if Palestinians are granted any land concessions in negotiations.
President Donald Trump said during a visit to Israel last month the two sides are ready to resume talks after a three-year hiatus.
“Any peace agreement that is predicated on dividing Jerusalem, on cutting up our tiny country and handing it to the Palestinians, will fail,” said Bennett, the head of the Jewish Home party, which wants to annex land in the West Bank and ardently opposes a two-state solution.
Israel’s 45-year-old education minister, who became a millionaire as a technology entrepreneur before entering politics 11 years ago, only controls eight seats in the 120-member Knesset.
But that’s enough to undermine the coalition of six parties that gives Netanyahu a narrow, six-seat majority.
For the Palestinians who want east Jerusalem as the capital of a future state, Bennett’s conditions risk derailing any negotiations that unfold -- that is, unless Netanyahu brings the Labor party into the fold and sidelines Bennett.
The risk of that strategy is that support for his Likud party wanes and some voters defect to Jewish Home, further right on the political spectrum.
Dividing Jerusalem Trump didn’t give details on what his vision for a breakthrough in peace negotiations might look like, but notably didn’t push either side to make concessions.
He’s taken this approach to avoid emboldening Netanyahu’s rivals on the right, primarily Bennett, according to former U.
ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro.
It’s not hard to see why.
Since Trump was elected, Bennett has ratcheted up pressure on Netanyahu to bury the idea of a Palestinian state.
He garnered support for a bill in February to legalize some Jewish settlements in the West Bank.
His vision includes annexing large portions of the territory, currently under Israeli military control.
“No Israeli will accept dividing Jerusalem,” Bennett said from his office at the Knesset on Monday, a week after the U.
president stopped in Israel during his first overseas tour.
“There’s still a lack of clarity in the region what Trump means by peace -- what is this deal? What does it mean?” For more on why the idea of a two-state solution is fading, click here.
For at least 15 years, the U.
and the international community have pushed for a peace deal that would include the establishment of a Palestinian state in the West Bank, east Jerusalem and Gaza Strip -- areas captured by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war.
During his trip, Trump conspicuously refrained from mentioning the idea of an independent state.
More Autonomy Bennett said he envisions giving Palestinians autonomy “on steroids”-- implying an exponential increase in their rights -- but not allowing them control of territory beyond what was ceded during the Oslo process of the 1990s.
He has, for instance, increased funding to Israel’s Arab communities as education minister.
Still, his demands are a far cry from the longstanding position of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who’s said repeatedly the only way forward is a two-state solution.
Highlighting another stumbling block to a deal, Netanyahu reiterated that any future peace agreement must include an Israeli military presence in the West Bank, the Jerusalem Post reported on Tuesday.
“The best way to achieve peace is by keeping Israel strong and providing the Palestinians autonomy," Bennett said.
“I know the world is not on my side.
But there is one little thing that is on my side, and that’s reality.

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