| france24.com 
 Vance slams Israel’s West Bank annexation vote as ‘insult’ and ‘stupid political stunt’
 By:
 
 6–7 minutes
 
 
 
 
 
 US  Vice President JD Vance criticised Thursday Israel’s parliament vote on  West Bank annexation, saying it amounted to an “insult” and went against  the Trump administration policies and efforts to ensure that the  US-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hamas holds in Gaza.
 
 The  Israeli parliament on Wednesday narrowly passed a symbolic preliminary  vote in support of annexing the occupied West Bank — an apparent attempt  to embarrass Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu while Vance was still in  the country.
 
 The bill was sponsored by parliamentary  hard-liners, with only one member of Netanyahu’s Likud Party joining  them. With Netanyahu opposed, the bill is unlikely to pass the multiple  votes it requires to become law.
 
 While many members of  Netanyahu’s coalition, including the Likud, support annexation, they  have backed off those calls since US President Donald Trump said last  month that he opposes such a move. The United Arab Emirates, a key US  and Israeli ally in the push to peace in Gaza, has said any annexation  by Israel would be a “red line.”
 
 After Vance's visit, Rubio due in Israel as US tries to shore up Gaza ceasefire
 
 'A very stupid political stunt' On  the tarmac of Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion airport before departing Israel,  Vance said that if the Knesset vote was a “political stunt, then it is a  very stupid political stunt.”
 
 "I personally take some insult to  it," Vance said. "The policy of the Trump administration is that the  West Bank will not be annexed by Israel.”
 
 The Palestinians seek  the West Bank, captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war, as part of a  future independent state. Israeli annexation of the territory would all  but bury hopes for a two-state solution between Israel and the  Palestinians — the hoped-for outcome by most of the world.
 
 Earlier  this week, Vance announced the opening of a civilian military  coordination center in southern Israel where some 200 US troops are  working alongside the Israeli military and delegations from other  countries planning the stabilization and reconstruction of Gaza.
 
 Meanwhile,  US Secretary of State Marco Rubio told journalists at Joint Base  Andrews late Wednesday that he plans to visit the centre and appoint a  Foreign Service official to work alongside the top US military commander  in the Middle East, Vice Adm. Brad Cooper.
 
 The US is seeking  support from other allies, especially Gulf Arab nations, to create an  international stabilization force to be deployed to Gaza and train a  Palestinian force.
 
 “We’d like to see Palestinian police forces  in Gaza that are not Hamas and that are going to do a good job, but  those still have to be trained and equipped," he said.
 
 Rubio,  who is meeting with Netanyahu later on Thursday, has also criticised  Israeli far-right lawmakers' effort to push for annexation of the West  Bank.
 
 'Bibi-sitting' Israeli media referred to the  nonstop parade of American officials visiting to ensure Israel holds up  its side of the fragile ceasefire as “Bibi-sitting.” The term, utilizing  Netanyahu’s nickname of Bibi, refers to an old campaign ad when  Netanyahu positioned himself as the “Bibi-sitter” whom voters could  trust with their kids.
 
 In the first medical evacuation since the  ceasefire began on Oct. 10, the head of the World Health Organization  said Thursday the group has evacuated 41 critical patients and 145  companions out of the Gaza Strip.
 
 In a statement posted to X,  Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called on nations to show solidarity and help  some 15,000 patients who are still waiting for approval to receive  medical care outside Gaza.
 
 His calls were echoed by an official  with the UN Population Fund who on Wednesday described the “sheer  devastation” that he witnessed on his most recent travel to Gaza, saying  that there is no such thing as a “normal birth in Gaza now”.
 
 Andrew  Saberton, an executive director at UNFPA, told reporters how difficult  the agency’s work has become due to the lack of functioning or even  standing health care facilities.
 
 “I was not fully prepared for  what I saw. One can’t be. The sheer extent of the devastation looked  like the set of a dystopian film. Unfortunately, it is not fiction,” he  said.
 
 Saberton added that Palestinian women cannot get access to a  hospital. “They often don’t even have access to a private space in a  tent. We have stories of women giving birth actually in the rubble,  beside the road,” he said.
 
 Open Gaza to international media? Separately  on Thursday, Israel’s Supreme Court held a hearing into whether to open  the Gaza Strip to the international media and gave the state 30 days to  present a new position in light of the new situation under the  ceasefire.
 
 Israel has blocked reporters from entering Gaza since the war erupted with the Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct 7, 2023.
 
 The  Foreign Press Association, which represents dozens of international  news organizations including The Associated Press, had asked the court  to order the government to open the border.
 
 In a statement after  Thursday's decision, the FPA expressed its “disappointment” and called  the Israeli government's position to deny journalists access  “unacceptable.”
 
 The court rejected a request from the FPA early  in the war, due to objections by the government on security grounds. The  group filed a second request for access in September 2024. The  government has repeatedly delayed the case.
 
 Palestinian  journalists have covered the two-year war for international media. But  like all Palestinians, they have been subject to tough restrictions on  movement and shortages of food, repeatedly displaced and operated under  great danger. Some 200 Palestinian journalists have been killed by  Israeli fire, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.
 
 “It  is time for Israel to lift the closure and let us do our work alongside  our Palestinian colleagues," said Tania Kraemer, chairperson of the  FPA.
 |