Sunday, September 15, 2019

Sovereignty for the Jordan Valley?

Originally published in myesha.org.il, translated by Hillel Fendel
Map of the Jordan Valley
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced earlier this month that "conditions had ripened" for the application of Israeli sovereignty over the Jordan Valley and the northern Dead Sea area. He said he would take this step almost immediately after the coming election, "if I am granted your trust and confidence." Though many accused him merely of electioneering, the very fact of the announcement held great significance.

Netanyahu explained the background of his plan: "We are aware that the U.S. President Trump is about to unveil his Deal of the Century, right after our elections. This presents us with a great challenge, as well as a great opportunity to apply our sovereignty in Judea, Samaria, and elsewhere – which I intend to do, in stages. There is one place where we can do this now, because the conditions have ripened: The Jordan Valley and the northern Dead Sea. This will be the first step…"

The Jordan Valley's critical strategic importance is undisputed. Any enemy attempt to invade Israel from the east would have to be executed through the narrow passes of the Judea/Samaria mountains, and Israeli control of the area would prevent this.

Yesha [Judea & Samaria] Council Chairman Chananel Durani said in response to Netanyahu's announcement, "This is a very important development, one that the settlement enterprise has hoped and worked for since its establishment. It is a historic and unprecedented event for the State of Israel – for sovereignty is the harbinger of the deepening and thickening of our presence in this area."

Even Labor Party leaders such as Yigal Alon and Yitzchak Rabin recognized the vital need to retain the Jordan Valley. During the Knesset debate on the Oslo Accords of 1995, Rabin declared: "Israel's defensible security border will be placed in the Jordan Valley, in the broadest sense of the term."