Trump ‘never said he wants American troops to do the job. Guess what? We’ll do the job’, Netanyahu declared [GETTY]
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has hailed US President Donald Trump’s widely criticised plan to expel Palestinians from the war-battered Gaza Strip, saying Israel is willing to “do the job”.
In a Fox News interview aired late Saturday as the premier was wrapping up a visit to Washington, Netanyahu, who is wanted by the ICC in connection to war crimes committed in the Gaza Strip, defended Trump’s proposal, which has sparked concern and condemnation across the Middle East and the world.
“I think that President Trump’s proposal is the first fresh idea in years, and it has the potential to change everything in Gaza,” Netanyahu said, adding that it represents a “correct approach” to the future of the Palestinian territory.
“All Trump is saying, ‘I want to open the gate and give them an option to relocate temporarily while we rebuild the place physically’,” Netanyahu said, denying that the displacement would be permanent.
Trump “never said he wants American troops to do the job. Guess what? We’ll do the job”, Netanyahu declared.
Israel has occupied the Gaza strip since 1967 and pulled out troops from the territory in 2005.
The UN and leading rights groups consider Gaza to still be occupied, as Israel controls the movement of people, airspace and flow of goods into the enclave
It subsequently imposed a crippling blockade on the territory in 2007.
Israel’s latest war on Gaza has been its deadliest and most destructive yet.
Netanyahu said Trump’s plan was a departure from the “same old, same old, same old, we leave, Gaza becomes again occupied by these terrorists who use it as a base to attack Israel…It doesn’t go anywhere.”
“I think we should pursue it,” he added, cautioning that “the real issue” was finding a country that would agree to take in displaced Gazans.
Neighbouring Arab states Jordan and Egypt have long rejected any displacement of Palestinians from Gaza, which is seen as part of a future Palestinian state.
The Israeli leader also said that Palestinians would have to “disavow terrorism” to be allowed to return to Gaza.
For Palestinians, any attempt to force them out of Gaza would evoke dark memories of what the Arab world calls the “Nakba“, or catastrophe, the mass displacement of Palestinians during Israel’s creation in 1948.
“Everybody describes Gaza as the biggest open-air prison in the world,” Netanyahu said.
“Get the population out, allow them to leave. Not forcible eviction, not ethnic cleansing — getting people out of what all these countries and all these do-gooders say is an open-air prison. Why are you keeping them in prison?”