The
official was referring to a report from Israel's Army Radio US which
claimed the Obama administration proposed that Israel relinquish the
Jordan Valley to the Palestinians and that the Jewish state would lease
back parts of the valley from the Palestinians for a up to seven years.
Obama's Israel squeeze: Worse than you know – Aaron Klein – www.wnd.com
Demands Jewish state retreat from territory vital for survival
NEW
YORK – A U.S. proposal for a deal with the Palestinian Authority did
not include an Israeli lease for part of the strategic Jordan Valley as
widely reported, according to a senior PA official speaking to WND.
The
PA official said the proposed deal from the Obama administration
instead gave most of that territory entirely to Palestinian control.
The
official was referring to a report from Israel's Army Radio US which
claimed the Obama administration proposed that Israel relinquish the
Jordan Valley to the Palestinians and that the Jewish state would lease
back parts of the valley from the Palestinians for a up to seven years.
According
to that report, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu agreed to the idea,
but asked for the arrangement for the lease to be longer than seven
years.
The
PA official told WND the Obama administration instead has adopted the
Palestinian position that the Jordan Valley should become part of a
future Palestinian state entirely.
The
official said the U.S. had proposed that international troops, along
with Jordanian and Palestinian forces, would patrol the area. The
official said discussions would be held with Israel for special
security arrangements in the Jordan Valley to be determined.
The PA official said no part of the Obama proposal allowed for Israel to lease the Jordan Valley.
He said it was Netanyahu's office which presented a counter-offer of leasing the Jordan Valley from the PA.
The
PA official and other Palestinian diplomatic sources contacted by WND
said the PA has no intention of leasing the Jordan Valley to Israel if
it gains the territory in a deal.
The
Jordan Valley encompasses a massive swath of territory. Israeli
security analysts and commentators long have argued the country is
indefensible without the valley.
Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon stated multiple times the Jordan Valley is so
vital to Israel's security that Israel must control it in the future.
Netanyahu
himself said at a Knesset faction meeting last February that Israel
could never agree to withdraw from the Jordan Valley under any peace
agreement signed with the Palestinians. Netanyahu told the Israel's
Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee that the Jordan Valley's
strategic importance along the eastern border of the West Bank made it
impossible for Israel to withdraw.
The
Jordan Valley runs from Lake Tiberias in the north to northern Dead Sea
in the south. It continues another 96 miles south of the Dead Sea to
Aqaba along the Jordanian border. The Jordan Valley forms the border
between Israel and Jordan in the north, and the eastern strip of the
strategic West Bank in the south.
The information comes as Netanyahu met Secretary of State Hillary Clinton here in New York today.
According
to Israeli sources in Netanyahu's entourage, Clinton demanded Israel
agree to at least a two-month freeze of all Jewish construction in the
West Bank as well as a major slowdown on Jewish building in the eastern
sections of Jerusalem.
At
a press conference, Clinton said the Israeli decision on settlement
building was counterproductive to talks with the Palestinians. She said
she believed that both Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas were serious about the talks.
"The
prime minister and President Abbas are both very committed to a
two-state solution. And we are going to find a way forward," she said.
Netanyahu, meanwhile, said he was "serious" about talks with the Palestinians.
"We'll
be talking about how to resume and continue this process to get a
historic agreement with peace and security between us and the
Palestinians," Netanyahu said just before he began a meeting with
Clinton.
"We
also hope to broaden it to many other Arab countries ... we are quite
serious about doing it and we want to get on with it," he said.