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Senior members of the Israeli cabinet have clashed over payments Israel makes to the Palestinian Authority, as the war with Hamas exacerbates faultlines in Benjamin Netanyahu’s rightwing coalition.

Ultranationalist finance minister Bezalel Smotrich said earlier this week that he had directed officials to halt the transfer of funds to the PA — which exercises limited autonomy in parts of the occupied West Bank — claiming it supported Hamas’s devastating attack on Israel last month.

But in a press conference on Wednesday evening, defence minister Yoav Gallant insisted Israel should send the funds as soon as possible, arguing that the PA played a key role in maintaining stability in the West Bank, which Palestinians seek as the heart of a future state but which has been under Israeli military occupation since 1967.

“It is appropriate to transfer the funds to the Palestinian Authority immediately so they will be used by its forces and by sectors . . . that are dealing with the prevention of terrorism,” said Gallant, a member of Netanyahu’s Likud party.

The PA has condemned the killing of civilians, but its leadership has stopped short of denouncing Hamas for the October 7 attack.

Under the Oslo Accords — interim peace agreements signed between the Israelis and Palestinians in the 1990s — Israel collects various taxes on behalf of the Palestinians and transfers the funds each month to the PA. According to the PA finance ministry, the transfers in the first nine months of this year have averaged around Shk730mn ($183mn) per month.

The cabinet spat underscores the divisions in Netanyahu’s government, between those who want to bolster the PA and see it as a stabilising force in the West Bank, and religious nationalists such as Smotrich, who regard the PA as an impediment to their ambitions to fully annex the territory.

Gallant’s intervention follows pushback against Smotrich’s move by the US, Israel’s key ally and security guarantor, with Antony Blinken, the secretary of state, saying during a hearing in Washington this week that the PA’s lack of financial resources was undermining its position.

“The Palestinian Authority is doing everything it can to keep security and stability in the West Bank,” Blinken said. “It is vastly under-resourced. This is another aspect of the problem.”

Israel has previously withheld funds for the PA. Days after Netanyahu’s government came to power in December, Smotrich signed a decree to withhold payments, saying he had “no interest” in whether the PA continued to exist after it launched international legal measures against Israel over the country’s occupation of the West Bank.

Raja Khalidi, director-general of MAS, a West-Bank-based economic think-tank, said that if Smotrich’s threats to cut funding were carried out, they would have a severe impact on both the PA’s ability to function and its wider economy.

“If this is not just a theatrical gesture . . . that’s going to cause problems for the budget. Maybe not this month — they maybe have reserves somewhere — but in a month or two,” he said.

“The question then is at what point will the PA be unable to pay its obligations to the banks and the 150,000 people on its payroll? And at what point does that trigger something else, [such as] a complete collapse of aggregate demand?”

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