Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel doubled down on his opposition to the creation of a Palestinian state this weekend, once more rebuffing strain from President Biden to conform to that path after the battle in Gaza is over.
“My insistence is what has prevented — through the years — the institution of a Palestinian state that will have constituted an existential hazard to Israel,” Mr. Netanyahu mentioned in an announcement in Hebrew on Sunday. “So long as I’m prime minister, I’ll proceed to strongly insist on this.”
The assertion reiterated feedback he made on social media yesterday, when he mentioned in Hebrew that he “is not going to compromise on full Israeli safety management of your complete space west of the Jordan River — and that’s irreconcilable with a Palestinian state.”
Mr. Netanyahu’s feedback got here after Mr. Biden spoke to him on Friday a few two-state resolution and floated the potential of a disarmed Palestinian nation that will not threaten Israel’s safety. Mr. Biden has argued that the creation of a Palestinian state is the one viable long-term decision to a battle that has dragged on for many years, repeating a place held by most American presidents and European leaders in current historical past.
Whereas there was no indication that Mr. Netanyahu would ease his strenuous opposition, which is fashionable along with his fragile right-wing political coalition, Mr. Biden had expressed optimism that they may but discover consensus.
“There are a variety of sorts of two-state options,” the president instructed reporters on the White Home a number of hours after Friday’s name, their first in almost a month amid pressure over the battle. “There’s a lot of nations which might be members of the U.N. which might be nonetheless — don’t have their very own militaries. Variety of states which have limitations.” He added, “And so I believe there’s methods through which this might work.”
On Sunday, Grant Shapps, Britain’s protection secretary, known as Mr. Netanyahu’s stance “disappointing.”
“There isn’t an alternative choice,” Mr. Shapps instructed Sky Information in a televised interview. “The entire world has agreed that the two-state resolution is one of the simplest ways ahead.”
António Guterres, the U.N. secretary common, mentioned that denying statehood for the Palestinian folks was “unacceptable.”
“The correct of the Palestinian folks to construct their very own state should be acknowledged by all,” Mr. Guterres wrote on X, with out referencing Mr. Netanyahu.
The Biden administration and the Israeli authorities have diverged sharply over how Gaza will probably be ruled when the preventing ends. President Biden and his high diplomat, Antony J. Blinken, have urged Israeli officers to maneuver towards the eventual institution of a Palestinian state.
Mr. Biden has recommended {that a} “revitalized” Palestinian Authority, which is predicated within the West Financial institution, might take over Gaza as soon as Hamas has been faraway from energy there. Mr. Netanyahu has rejected the thought of the authority returning to the enclave.
Regardless of assist from the worldwide neighborhood, a two-state strategy nonetheless faces monumental obstacles, together with waning assist for it among the many Israeli and Palestinian populations, the continued constructing of settlements within the Israeli-occupied West Financial institution, and a divided Palestinian management.
Two key companions in Mr. Netanyahu’s coalition — Bezalel Smotrich, the finance minister, and Itamar Ben-Gvir, the nationwide safety minister — are staunch opponents of a two-state resolution. Some analysts have recommended the 2 ministers and their events would vote to dissolve the federal government if Mr. Netanyahu took severe steps to advance the institution of a Palestinian state.
Analysts identified that Mr. Netanyahu’s willingness to undermine his American counterpart was turning into routine.
“Humiliating Biden has turn into a every day prevalence for Netanyahu,” Khaled Elgindy, a senior fellow on the Center East Institute, a assume tank in Washington, wrote on social media.
Peter Baker contributed reporting.