
‘Nothing, no one to recognise': Israel minister's West Bank remark casts shadow on Palestinian state's future
'This reality finally buries the idea of a Palestinian state, because there is nothing to recognise and no one to recognise,' said minister Bezalel Smotrich.
Palestinians and rights groups worry that if the West Bank is cut into two separate parts, then their plan for a future Palestinian state would be disrupted.
Smotrich warned that "anyone who tries today to recognise a Palestinian state — will receive an answer from us (Israel) on the ground".
Smotrich also informed that the development plan of E1, an open tract of land east of Jerusalem, is expected to receive its final approval next week. The plan, which has been under consideration for over two decades, was frozen due to pressure from the previous US administrations.
However, on Thursday, the Israeli minister praised US President Donald Trump and US ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, as "true friends of Israel as we have never had before".
The E1 development plan includes thousands of apartments for the expansion of Maale Adumim settlement, Smotrich said. While some bureaucratic steps are still pending, the infrastructure work could begin in the next few months if the process moves quickly, and the construction of homes could also begin in about one year.
However, rights groups were quick to condemn the plan.
The Peace Now group called it "deadly for the future of Israel and for any chance of achieving a peaceful two-state solution", which is "guaranteeing many more years of bloodshed".
The Palestinian Authority and Arab countries recently condemned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's statement from Tuesday, where he said that he was "very" attached to the vision of a Greater Israel.
Earlier this week, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced that his country will formally recognise a Palestinian state, a move similar to that of France, Britain and Canada.
"A two-state solution is humanity's best hope to break the cycle of violence in the Middle East and to bring an end to the conflict, suffering and starvation in Gaza," Albanese said after a Cabinet meeting.
Late in July, Canada joined hands with France and the UK and declared that it would recognise the state of Palestine in September. Prime Minister Mark Carney announced that there was "no room for delay".
Trump had reacted curtly to Canada's move and said that the country's decision would make it "very hard" for the US to make a trade deal with them.
France and the UK's move to recognise a Palestinian state sparked a shift in the stance G7 countries have taken towards the Palestinian struggle.
Israel and the US condemned France and the UK for their move, labelling their decision as a "reward for terror and Hamas".
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
7 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Sudan's Famine Enters Dangerous New Phase
With the world's attention focused on crises elsewhere, Sudan's war-induced famine is growing in what used to be productive farmlands. Staples of the Sudanese diet, such as sorghum and millet, have been unavailable in most markets, forcing people to survive on animal feed made of peanut shells. Now even that has become too expensive for most people because of constrained supplies. Heavy rains are cutting off roads, class="backlink" data-vars-page-type="story" data-vars-link-type="Manual" data-vars-anchor-text="warring parties">warring parties are blocking aid deliveries and farmers are reluctant to risk being killed while working the fields. The country is now in the middle of the long, dry period between harvests—from the middle of July to September. Famine could spread from six locations to 17, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, or IPC, an initiative supported by the United Nations and major relief agencies, said recently. 'Millions of people are already weakened after a sustained run of rising hunger; many do not have the strength to miss even a single meal a day,' said Francesco Lanino, Save the Children's deputy country director for Sudan. More than two-thirds of the country's 49 million people need humanitarian aid, according to the U.N. With the U.S., formerly the largest donor to the mosaic of aid agencies working on the ground, now stripping back its contributions, a full-blown disaster is building unless the war ends. How did the crisis reach this point? Darfur has been the site of two genocides over the past two decades. Both have been carried out by what is now called the Rapid Support Forces, a rebel group trying to overthrow Sudan's military government. The RSF, which is composed mainly of ethnically Arab fighters, has been targeting tens of thousands of Black Sudanese in Darfur. The Sudanese army's last stronghold is in Darfur's capital, El Fasher. Residents trapped there are subjected to daily bombings and ethnic violence. The RSF fighters, driving in pickup trucks mounted with machine guns, have repeatedly attacked displacement camps over the course of the war, raping women and killing men and teenage boys, rights groups say. Recently, RSF fighters attacked two famine-stricken displacement camps outside El Fasher, where they killed more than 40 civilians and injured dozens of others. The fighting, now in its third year, has triggered the world's largest humanitarian crisis, with the U.N. accusing both sides of using hunger as a weapon. The U.S. estimates that more than 150,000 people have been killed in the conflict. What does it look like on the ground? In August last year, the IPC's review committee declared that famine had taken hold in the Zamzam displacement camp, home to more than 500,000 people. Some 637,000 Sudanese are already living in famine, with an estimated eight million in need of emergency food assistance, according to the U.N. In the city of El Fasher, the U.N.'s World Food Program is supporting over 250,000 trapped residents with digital cash, but they can't find any food to purchase in the markets due to blocked roads, according to the U.N. 'Everyone in El Fasher is facing a daily struggle to survive,' said Eric Perdison, WFP's regional director. 'People's coping mechanisms have been completely exhausted by over two years of war.' Children at a camp in Sudan's Nuba Mountains last year. At a displaced-people's camp in South Darfur, some 13 children have died from starvation in early August, while many other residents are battling malnutrition, the Sudan Doctors Network said. In the Kordofan region, famed for its sorghum and wheat fields, residents have begun to starve to death, after escalating violence disrupted the main harvest, aid officials say. In areas around the Nuba Mountains, bags of food aid dropped from aircraft—to sidestep rebel-infested highways—often split open on landing, leaving famine-stricken residents scrambling to collect what food they can from the ground. What can the rest of the world do to intervene? The U.S. and Saudi Arabia have led talks to reach a truce between the warring factions, but with little success. During the signing of a peace deal between Rwanda and Congo in Washington in June, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that Washington's next priority would be to end Sudan's conflict. But there are powerful geopolitical factors in play, with countries like Iran, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Russia and China all competing for influence. With a 400-mile Red Sea coastline, the country is perched on a strategic shipping lane between the Middle East and sub-Saharan Africa. The U.S. has accused Russia of backing both sides, while Iran and the U.A.E. have also seized on the conflict to extend their influence across the region. Iran tried to persuade Sudan to let it build a naval base on its Red Sea coast, while the U.A.E. has been aiding the RSF to protect its economic interests in Sudan, which range from ports along the Nile River to vast farmlands and lucrative gold mining operations, according to researchers and activists. In response to a request for comment, the U.A.E. denied that it was aiding either side in the war and called for an immediate cease-fire and unhindered passage for humanitarian aid throughout the country. A camp hosting Sudanese refugees in Chad last year. How could this war destabilize the region? The RSF has seized control of the strategic border region that straddles Sudan, Egypt and Libya, inserting themselves at the center of a vital trade corridor. The region also serves as a transit route for migrants trying to reach Europe from sub-Saharan Africa. Nearly four million Sudanese have fled to neighboring countries, most of them to Chad, South Sudan, Libya and Ethiopia. The influx has strained public resources in some of the most-fragile states and increased the spread of diseases such as cholera, measles and malaria, further straining underfunded refugee camps, according to the World Health Organization. Write to Nicholas Bariyo at Sudan's Famine Enters Dangerous New Phase


Hindustan Times
37 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Who else is receiving Kennedy Center Honors as Tom Cruise turns down Trump's invite
Tom Cruise will not be among the recipients of this year's Kennedy Center Honors, after declining President Donald Trump's invitation, per The Washington Post. Tom Cruise will not receive a Kennedy Center Honor this year after declining the invitation. (AFP) On Wednesday, Trump announced the 2025 honorees for the prestigious Washington, D.C. event, which 'recognizes and celebrates individuals whose unique artistic contributions have shaped our world,' according to the Kennedy Center. ALSO READ| Tom Cruise turns down invite to receive lifetime achievement award from Donald Trump: Report Who will receive Kennedy Center Honors? The five names on the list span music, film, and theater: country legend George Strait, rock icons KISS, Broadway star Michael Crawford, disco queen Gloria Gaynor, and Hollywood veteran Sylvester Stallone. Cruise, known for his action-packed roles in the Mission Impossible and Top Gun franchises was reportedly offered the award this year but turned it down. The Washington Post, citing current and former Kennedy Center employees, reported that the actor's packed schedule was to blame. Indeed a busy year for Cruise In November, the Top Gun star is set to receive an honorary Oscar at the Governors Awards, alongside production designer Wynn Thomas and choreographer-actress Debbie Allen, announced by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences back in June. Meanwhile, Trump himself hinted that he could take center stage at the Honors in the future. 'I waited and waited and waited, and I said, 'The hell with it, I'll become chairman and I'll give myself an honor,'' the president quipped. 'Next year, we'll honor Trump, okay?' Trump also revealed he will be stepping in as the emcee for this year's ceremony, a role previously held by television legend Walter Cronkite from 1981 to 2002, and later by Ambassador Caroline Kennedy, daughter of President John F. Kennedy, from 2003 to 2012. ALSO READ| Trump admin arresting more migrants with no criminal records amid crackdown Initially, the president said the Kennedy Center's board had chosen 'a truly exceptional class of honorees.' But pressed by reporters, he admitted,'I would say I was about 98 percent involved ... they all went through me,' Trump said. 'I turned down plenty who were too woke.'
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
37 minutes ago
- First Post
Trump-Putin summit: How the US Secret Service is preparing for high-stakes meeting
US President Donald Trump and Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin will descend on Alaska for a much-awaited meeting on August 15. The summit, which was announced just last week, is being hosted at the American military's Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage. With such short notice, how did the Secret Service prepare for the safety of both the leaders? Masks of Russia's President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump are displayed for sale in Saint Petersburg on August 7, 2025. AFP United States President Donald Trump is set to host Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska, a territory that Russia sold to America in 1867 for $7.2 million. The high-stakes summit on a military base on the outskirts of the city of Anchorage will be keenly watched across the world. The two leaders are expected to discuss a possible ceasefire between Moscow and Kyiv, without the presence of Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The talks, which Trump has described as a 'feel-out' meeting, have thrown a big security challenge as they came at short notice. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD So, how is the American Secret Service preparing for the Alaska summit? We will explain. Picking the venue for Trump-Putin summit Putin will cross the Bering Sea, the narrow strait of water separating the US from Russia, to enter American soil on Friday (August 15) for the high-level meeting with Trump in Alaska. The two leaders will hold talks at the US military's Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska. However, this venue was not the first choice of the Secret Service for the much-anticipated summit. As per a Bloomberg report, the US agency, as well as the Russian consulate in New York, were seeking short-term rentals that could host Trump and Putin. Beau Disbrow, a realtor in Anchorage, told the news agency, 'Most of my short-term rentals were booked, but I did manage to put some of them into one home.' It was finally decided to hold the summit, which Trump announced just a week ago, at Alaska's largest military installation. 'We're in the height of tourist season, so hotels are tight, cars are tight,' Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy told Bloomberg Television on Thursday (August 14). 'Having this on the base alleviates a lot of issues.' Earlier this week, the White House attempted to downplay the expectations for a peace deal, describing the meeting between Trump and Putin as a 'listening exercise'. How Secret Service is preparing for Trump-Putin summit The US Secret Service had to be ready for Trump's meeting with Putin in Alaska, also known as the Last Frontier, on short notice. Speaking to NPR, Bill Gage, a former Secret Service special agent, said that the agency did not have to worry about 'country clearances and visas and weapons permits' as it is a domestic trip for the American president. However, the agents still need to be ready for any adverse event. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD 'You know, Alaska is far away from the continental United States. They still have to plan for all sorts of eventualities - natural disasters, earthquake, volcanic eruptions, and the list goes on,' he added. Alaska, a vast wilderness, is sparsely populated. Anchorage, where the summit will be held at 11:30 am local time (1 am IST), has limited hotel rooms and a small rental-car market. After Trump announced the summit with Putin last week, the only agent deployed at the Secret Service's post in Alaska started preparing for hundreds of reinforcements in the coming days, according to the Bloomberg report. The US agency has a mighty task at hand: to protect both Trump and Putin. With just a week for planning, the Secret Service had a lot on its plate. However, its job was made a bit easier as the meeting is on American soil. It can easily move weapons, communications equipment and medical gear without foreign constraints, four people familiar with the planning told the news agency. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The military base, the venue for the high-stakes meeting, boasts controlled airspace, fortified gates and quick access to military units. Motorcade SUVs and other assets are arriving in Anchorage from other parts of the state. Hundreds of agents have reached the city. The US State Department protocol is being adhered to to draw up the plan. Reciprocity rules dictate that every courtesy extended to one leader has to be followed for the other, officials said in a bilateral meeting. 'While Russian security will control Putin's immediate movements while the Secret Service maintains an outer ring,' reported Bloomberg. Strict rules will be in place as Trump and Putin fly to Alaska. Neither side will be allowed to open the doors or ride in the other's vehicle. 'If 10 US agents are posted outside a meeting room, 10 Russian agents will stand on the other side. Everything is matched body for body, gun for gun', one person said. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD From the arrival motorcade to the presence of translators in the room, the reciprocity will be maintained in all moves. Each side will have its own language teams. The US and Russia are also reportedly discussing the number and size of hold rooms, secure waiting areas for each leader. The Secret Service is awaiting a green-light from Russia to formally approve the full security plan, the people told Bloomberg. 'The safety of the President is our highest priority. In order to maintain operational security, the Secret Service does not discuss the specific means and methods used to conduct our protective operations,' the Secret Service said in a statement. Downtown hotels are packed and rental car lots have been cleared for convoys. Agents in suits and earpieces are stationed at intersections, while others in plain clothes are at coffee shops and parking garages. 'Alaska state troopers and local police are folded into motorcade routes that have been mapped down to the turn lane,' as per Bloomberg. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The movement of the vehicles of Putin and Trump is being choreographed, so they are apart and fully protected. With inputs from agencies