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Netanyahu backs land swaps: WikiLeaks

November 30, 2010 06:50 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 05:27 am IST - JERUSALEM

A confidential diplomatic cable released by WikiLeaks says Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu supports the notion of land swaps with the Palestinians.

But a statement on Tuesday from the prime minister’s office said Mr Netanyahu meant only that he was willing to accept territorial compromises within the framework of a future peace deal.

“That was Netanyahu’s open policy, that is his policy today and in the aforementioned meeting in February 2009 he did not voice any other position,” the statement said. “Any other interpretation is incorrect and definitely does not represent the prime minister’s position.”

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Mr Netanyahu has been very careful to keep his positions on Israel’s future borders very close to the vest.

The Feb. 26, 2009 cable, dated two weeks after the Israeli leader was elected, says “Netanyahu expressed support for the concept of land swaps, and emphasized that he did not want to govern the West Bank and Gaza but rather to stop attacks from being launched from there.”

This sentence was contained in the cable summary but is not amplified in the section of the report that refers to peacemaking with the Palestinians.

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U.S. Embassy spokesman Kurt Hoyer would not comment on the cable. He said the diplomat who signed off on it, Luis G. Moreno, had left Israel and could not immediately be reached.

Previous Israeli governments and the Palestinians have expressed support for the concept of trading West Bank land where Jewish settlements stand for Israeli territory. Mr Netanyahu has not publicly voiced his opinion on this matter, though his foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, favours redrawing Israel’s borders to include settlements and exclude areas with large Arab populations.

The U.S. had hoped Israel would renew a moratorium on new settlement construction so it could try to reach an agreement with the Palestinians on future borders. But negotiations remain deadlocked over continued Israeli construction in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, areas the Palestinians claim for a future state along with the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.

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