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Netanyahu Denies Backing Away From Two-State Solution

Netanyahu Denies Backing Away  From Two-State Solution
Netanyahu Denies Backing Away  From Two-State Solution

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office denied reports on Sunday he has backed away from a 2009 commitment to seek a two-state peaceful solution with the Palestinians.

A statement by Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party widely reported by Israeli media said he had said that a speech he gave six years ago agreeing for the first time to Palestinian statehood as a solution to decades of conflict was now “irrelevant.”

Netanyahu “never said such a thing,” his office said in a statement responding to the reports, Reuters said in a report.

Likud had apparently issued the remarks to debunk earlier Israeli media reports suggesting Netanyahu had in a previous term of office negotiated a broad withdrawal from land Israel captured in a 1967 war.

The party’s statement, said Netanyahu had also suggested “there would be no withdrawals or concessions, that this is simply irrelevant,” referring to swapping any occupied land for peace.

Netanyahu’s office denied this, too, saying he has long adhered to a policy that “under current conditions in the Middle east any land that is handed over would be grabbed by extremists.”

The Israeli leader had repeatedly said he would not hand over land at risk of falling into the hands of “extremists” since the collapse of peace talks in April and after fighting a July-August war with the Palestinian group Hamas militants in Gaza.

The international community has long pushed for the creation of a Palestinian state on Occupied Territories. In 1993, Israel and the Palestinians signed an interim agreement that was to lead to the end of the conflict.

The media accusations against Netanyahu over the Palestinian conflict come as part of a bitterly fought campaign for a March 17 election.

Polls show Netanyahu running neck and neck with leading rival Isaac Herzog of the left-of-center Zionist Union, which says it would seek a resumption of regional peace talks.

 

Financialtribune.com