Smotrich, Netanyahu push Gaza-West Bank 'annexation' with US backing
Calling Gaza's resettlement a “Zionist duty", Smotrich urges "full annexation" as Netanyahu eyes land grabs to appease extremists and cement control.
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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, right, speaks with Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich during the weekly cabinet meeting, Jan. 7, 2024 (Pool via AP, File)
Israeli far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich urged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday to move forward with "annexing" the occupied West Bank, declaring there is "no more appropriate time" to apply full "Israeli sovereignty" over the territory.
Speaking before the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee’s Subcommittee for Judea and Samaria, Smotrich framed the move as a "historic correction" to what he called the 2005 “mistake” of "Israel’s" unilateral withdrawal from Gaza’s Gush Katif settlement bloc. He emphasized the "annexation’s political, security, economic, and moral significance,” describing it as essential to the Zionist project.
“We’re advancing in two stages,” Smotrich explained. “First, de facto sovereignty, through administrative and cognitive processes to normalize settlement. Second, internal institutional changes, so that when the formal act is carried out, the system will be ready. We’ve done the groundwork—legally and administratively. We’re ready to press the button.”
In a direct appeal to Netanyahu, Smotrich stressed, “We have full support from the US administration—I say this from knowledge. The sky will not fall.” He called on the prime minister to act decisively, invoking Jewish historical destiny and urging him to convene the government to approve annexation.
Earlier in the day, during remarks at the Gush Katif Heritage Center, Smotrich also called for the "resettlement of Gaza," proposing an even broader effort than what existed before the 2005 disengagement.
Netanyahu weighs partial Gaza annexation to appease Smotrich
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is reportedly preparing to propose a "phased annexation" of parts of the Gaza Strip to the Security and Political Cabinet, in a bid to placate far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and safeguard his fragile governing coalition, Haaretz reported Monday evening.
Under the plan, Hamas would be given a brief window to accept a ceasefire deal. Should the group refuse, "Israel" would initiate a step-by-step "annexation of Gaza territory," starting with areas along the Strip’s eastern border, the so-called "internal buffer zone" maintained by Israeli occupation forces. The process would then expand northward, particularly targeting zones near Sderot and Askalan, with the ultimate aim of "annexing Gaza" in its entirety.
The proposal is expected to follow Netanyahu’s decision to increase humanitarian aid to Gaza, a move opposed by Smotrich’s Religious Zionism party. Sources cited by Haaretz suggest the "annexation plan" is part of a calculated balancing act by Netanyahu, offering concessions on aid while pushing forward with territorial expansion to retain far-right support.
During closed-door discussions with ministers, Netanyahu reportedly stated the "phased annexation plan" had received a "green light" from the administration of US President Donald Trump.
‘All Gaza will be Jewish’: Israeli minister pushes expulsion plan
Last week, Israeli Heritage Minister Amichai Eliyahu ignited outrage after openly stating that the Israeli entity is intensifying efforts to erase Gaza, with the aim of forcibly displacing its Palestinian population and replacing them with Israeli settlers, a move widely condemned as a campaign of ethnic cleansing and settler colonialism.
“The government is racing ahead for Gaza to be wiped out,” Eliyahu told Kol Barama, a Haredi radio station, as reported by Israeli media. “Thank God, we are wiping out this evil. We are pushing this population that has been educated on Mein Kampf.”
A member of the far-right Otzma Yehudit party, Eliyahu said the aim is to establish Jewish settlements across the enclave. He dismissed the idea of containment or limited zoning for those communities. “All Gaza will be Jewish,” he said, though he added that Arabs who are loyal to "Israel" could be permitted to stay. “We aren’t racists,” he asserted.
The minister also rejected reports of a humanitarian crisis in Gaza, where aid agencies have warned of widespread famine and the collapse of essential services amid the ongoing Israeli genocide. “There’s no hunger in Gaza,” he said. “But we don’t need to be concerned with hunger in the Strip. Let the world worry about it.” Eliyahu described the international concern over food shortages as “a campaign against Israel” and insisted, “we are at war and trying to kill ‘these monsters.’”
'A propaganda disaster'
Eliyahu’s remarks triggered condemnation across the political spectrum, with Opposition Leader Yair Lapid calling them both morally repugnant and strategically damaging.
“His words are a moral attack and a propaganda disaster,” Lapid said. “Israel will never convince the world of the justice of our war against terror as long as we are led by an extremist minority government with ministers who sanctify blood and death.”
“IDF soldiers do not fight, are killed, and injured to wipe out a civilian population,” Lapid claimed. “They fight to return the kidnapped and ensure Israel’s security.”
'Riviera in Gaza – From Vision to Reality'
These remarks come amid a renewed wave of far-right rhetoric from senior Israeli officials pushing for permanent demographic and territorial changes in the Gaza Strip.
Earlier this week, Smotrich took part in a Knesset conference titled “Riviera in Gaza – From Vision to Reality," which explicitly promoted plans to establish Israeli settler colonies in Gaza once the war ends.
Speaking at the event, Smotrich claimed support from military leadership, saying, “The chief of staff told me a week ago that the northern border of the Gaza Strip needs to be annexed for security reasons.” Organizers of the event claimed they had developed a framework addressing the “social, legal, security, and logistical” elements of such a settlement project, although no specific details were made public.
The conference drew a disturbing array of participants, including sitting government ministers, Knesset members, heads of illegal settlement councils, military personnel stationed near Gaza, and relatives of captives still held in the Strip, signaling broad institutional support for an agenda that violates international law.
Backlash from within
The push to reoccupy Gaza has sparked alarm, not just from opposition lawmakers but also within parts of the Israeli legal and military establishment. Gilad Kariv, a Knesset member from the center-left Labor Party, condemned the comments made by Eliyahu and Smotrich, accusing them of inciting violations of international law.
“Their positions are not aligned with any government or Knesset decisions, nor are they part of the war objectives set by the cabinet,” Kariv said. “In fact, the leaders of the defense establishment oppose them.”
Kariv also warned of the wider ramifications of such rhetoric, stating, “Their words endanger IDF soldiers and commanders, inflict strategic harm on Israel’s global standing, erode social cohesion within the country..."
Despite these warnings, the Israeli entity appears to be moving forward with plans that reflect long-standing settler-colonial aims in Gaza and the West Bank, further entrenching its occupation through demographic engineering and the destruction of Palestinian life and sovereignty.
'Israel' votes on legalizing the occupation
On July 23, the Israeli parliament passed a controversial bill claiming Israeli "sovereignty" over the West Bank and Jordan Valley, with the legislation receiving majority support from Knesset members.
The vote passed with 71 members supporting the measure and 13 opposing it, demonstrating the cohesion within the right-wing ruling coalition while also securing unexpected support from the opposition Yisrael Beiteinu party.
While the resolution itself holds no binding legal authority, its passage before a three-month legislative break reflects increasing political traction for "annexation policies". It follows the Knesset's 2024 rejection of Palestinian statehood and aligns with Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich's persistent efforts to formalize Israeli authority throughout the West Bank.
The Knesset's passage of this resolution has been met with unequivocal Palestinian rejection, as expressed by Resistance factions in their statements, while Palestinian Authority Vice President Hussein al-Sheikh also voiced the PA's opposition to this move, calling on international parties to recognize the State of Palestine as a political response to this decision.