JERUSALEM: A senior Israeli minister said on Wednesday that a cabinet vote to endorse annexation of parts of the West Bank will not take place early next week, despite Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s pledge a day earlier to act quickly after the US released a plan to end the conflict that was rejected by the Palestinians.

Netanyahu said he would ask the cabinet to advance the extension of Israeli sovereignty over most Jewish settlements and the strategic Jordan Valley, a move that would likely spark international outrage and complicate the White House’s efforts to build support for the plan.

Tourism Minister Yariv Levin told Israel Radio that a cabinet vote on annexing territories on Sunday was not technically feasible because of various preparations, including bringing the proposal before the attorney general and letting him consider the matter.

Levin, a senior member of Netanyahu’s Likud party, said the Palestinian state envisioned by the Trump plan is roughly the same Palestinian Authority that exists today, with authority to manage civil affairs, but lacking substantive powers like border control or a military.

Hard-line Israeli nationalists have meanwhile called for the immediate annexation of West Bank settlements ahead of the country’s third parliamentary elections in under a year, scheduled for March 2.

They have eagerly embraced the part of President Donald Trump’s peace plan that would allow Israel to annex territory but have rejected its call for a Palestinian state in parts of the occupied West Bank.

Israeli Defence Minister Naftali Bennett tweeted Wednesday that that which is postponed to after the elections will never happen.

“If we postpone or reduce the extension of sovereignty [in the West Bank], then the opportunity of the century will turn into the loss of the century,” said Bennett, a hawkish Netanyahu ally with the New Right party.

Nahum Barnea, a veteran Israeli columnist, stridently criticised the Trump plan in Wednesday’s Hebrew daily Yedioth Ahronoth, saying “it would create a Palestinian state more meager than Andorra, more fractured than the Virgin Islands.”

He cautioned that annexation would lead to a reality of two legal systems for two populations in the same territory one ruling, the second occupied. In other words, “an Apartheid state”.

Published in Dawn, January 30th, 2020

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