Published: 11:09, August 29, 2023 | Updated: 13:03, August 29, 2023
'No concessions to Palestinians for Saudi normalization deal'
By Xinhua

Israeli soldiers block the road after three alleged Palestinian gunmen were killed in Nablus, the West Bank, July 25, 2023. (PHOTO / AP)

JERUSALEM - An Israeli minister said on Monday that the government will not agree to "any concessions" to the Palestinians as part of a possible normalization deal with Saudi Arabia, as has been reportedly demanded by Riyadh and Washington.

"We will not make any concessions to the Palestinians. It's a fiction," Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich told Israel's Army Radio.

Smotrich, who is the leader of the pro-settler Religious Zionist Party, said Israel is interested in establishing official ties with Saudi Arabia, but "it has nothing to do with Judea and Samaria." Judea and Samaria is a frequently used Israeli term for the West Bank.

READ MORE: Palestine rejects Israel's further settlement in West Bank

Smotrich's statement comes after both Saudi Arabia and the United States have underscored several times in recent months that a US-brokered agreement between Israel and Saudi Arabia would necessitate positive developments toward a resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the 56-year-old Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip.