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Saudi normalization possible without commitment to Palestinian state, Deputy FM tells 'Post'

Saudi normalization possible without commitment to Palestinian state, Deputy FM tells 'Post'

Yahooa day ago
Asked whether normalization was possible without Israel having to commit to Palestinian statehood, Haskel answered that she 'believed so.'
Normalization between Israel andSaudi Arabia is possible without Israel having to commit to a pathway to Palestinian statehood, Deputy Foreign Minister Sharren Haskel said in an interview in the Jerusalem Post Studio on Monday.
The full interview will be published on Friday.
With aFrench-Saudi summit geared towards Palestinian statehood approaching, Haskel said that the gulf monarchy needed to 'make a decision' on whether to support Palestinian statehood or normalize relations with Israel.
'The offer for a Palestinian state was there on the table for years, multiple times. They refused. They didn't want it. Why? Because a bigger goal was not a Palestinian state. It was to obliterate the state of Israel, killing all the Jews in Israel and out [of it],' Haskel said.
'It's a religious cause. It's not a territorial aspiration in the sense of a state, but for the entire land. And I think that the Saudis need to make that choice as well, like Egypt did, like Jordan did, like the Emiratis, Bahrainis did,' the deputy foreign minister said.
Asked whether normalization was possible without Israel having to commit to Palestinian statehood, Haskel answered that she 'believed so.'
The French-Saudi summit was 'just another attempt to gain public international attention,' Haskel said, arguing that it would 'not change reality.'
Haskel cited a vote in the Knesset in which 98 MKs supported a declaratory measure against a unilateral formation of a Palestinian state.
By holding the summit, French President Emmanuel Macron was'rewarding' the October 7 Hamas massacre, Haskel said. The summit, while declaratory, could also give Hamas a 'breadth of fresh air' and 'takes us further from a ceasefire,' since Hamas will 'continue to say no' because by 'holding on a little further,' they will be rewarded, Haskel said.
'If the initiative would have been taken down a long time ago … I think a month and a half ago Hamas would have agreed to a ceasefire,' but such declarations gave Hamas 'more oxygen,' Haskel said.
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