Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warns
Palestinian Authority's unilateral moves are a double-edged sword •
Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz suggests countermeasures •
"When I was finance minister, we halted transfer of tax funds to PA," he
says.
International Relations,
Intelligence and Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz
|
Photo credit: Dudi Vaaknin |
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday
warned that the Palestinian Authority's unilateral applications to
various U.N. bodies were a double-edged sword and that Israel might
pursue its own set of unilateral steps to counter the Palestinian
maneuver.
Speaking at Sunday's cabinet meeting,
Netanyahu said, "The Palestinians have a lot to lose from such
unilateral action. They will only get a state via direct negotiations,
not empty declarations or unilateral moves. These only push a peace
agreement further away, and unilateral moves by them will be met with
unilateral moves by us."
Netanyahu said Abbas had "rushed to declare
that he was not even prepared to discuss recognizing Israel as the
nation state of the Jewish people. He did this even though he knows that
there cannot be any peace deal without it." Israel, he stressed, "is
willing to pursue the peace talks further, but not at any price."
The demand was echoed by the U.S. Foreign
Relations Committee Chairman Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ) who,
speaking at the annual Jerusalem Post conference in New York, said,
"President [Mahmoud] Abbas must recognize the Jewish state as a Jewish
state without equivocation."
International Relations, Intelligence and
Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz said that Palestinian
Authority President Mahmoud Abbas was "spiting in Israel's face. When I
was the finance minister, we would have immediately halted the transfer
of tax funds."
Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Ron Prosor said
Sunday that the Palestinians were making a mistake, saying that "had
the Palestinians bothered to read the applications to the various
conventions they seek to join, they would understand that they are in
blatant violation of the majority of their articles."
Meanwhile, the Israeli and Palestinian
negotiating teams, headed by Justice Minister Tzipi Livni and Chief
Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat, as well as American mediator Martin
Indyk, met Sunday for the second time since the crisis began. A
Palestinian official stressed that Livni and Erekat held separate
meetings with Indyk.
Speaking with Army Radio, Erekat said that the
Palestinians do not wish to see the peace talks collapse. PLO Executive
Committee Secretary-General Yasser Abed Rabbo, however, said Sunday
that unless Israel goes through with the fourth phase of the prisoners'
release, the Palestinians would continue to pursue unilateral moves.
The Arab League has convened an emergency
meeting for Wednesday, which will discuss the stalemate in the peace
talks. A senior Palestinian source said that Abbas plans to ask Arab
League members for their diplomatic and financial backing, in the event
that Israel or the U.S. will impose sanctions on the PA.
Speaking at a Habayit Hayehudi conference
Sunday, Housing Minister Uri Ariel said that his party "will not
tolerate a continued negotiation with the Palestinians unless they
retract their applications to U.N. bodies."
Habayit Hayehudi Chairman MK Naftali Bennett threatened
Sunday that he will seek International Criminal Court action against the
Abbas for war crimes. Commenting on the peace talks, Bennett likened
them to "a merchant who has fled with the merchandise and we're not
running after him with the IOUs."
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