MK Ofir Akunis (Likud), who is considered a close confidante of Prime Minister Netanyahu, told a townhall meeting in Tel Aviv on Saturday that
the Kingdom of Jordan is quite nervous about sharing a border with a state of 'Palestine.'
MK Ofir Akunis told a town hall gathering in Tel Aviv on Saturday
that Israeli officials have received feedback from their Jordanian
counterparts who are alarmed at the prospect of an Israeli withdrawal
from the boundary that separates the West Bank from the Hashemite
kingdom.
“The Jordanians are opposed to an Israeli withdrawal from the Jordan
Valley out of fear that if a Palestinian state arises and is taken over
by extremist elements like Hamas and Al-Qaida, this would endanger the
king’s rule, not just Tel Aviv,” Akunis said.
Netanyahu met last week with Jordan’s King Abdullah in Amman for what was described as a “surprise” visit.
But the Jordanians are apparently more afraid of the Arab League than they are of the 'Palestinians.' They can't say what Akunis said.
Jordanian Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour said earlier this month that
the Israeli annexation of the Jordan Valley would be contrary to the
peace agreement signed between the two countries in 1994.
Speaking to a gathering of parliament members, he said that Jordan
“categorically rejects any Israeli intention in this regard and will not
stand idly by, but will act diplomatically,” according to a report on
Thursday in the London-based daily Al-Hayat.
So the Jordanians are happy to have this remain unresolved forever. Well, at the moment there are no realistic better options anyway.
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