Britain has confirmed that it will not recognize the annexation by Israel of parts of the West Bank against the backdrop of the US peace plan, while an Israeli analyst warned Tel Aviv of a "deep crack" if it annexed the settlements, prior to the visit of US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to Israel.

The British position came in the words of Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs James Cleverley today, Monday, before the House of Commons.

Cleverly said that his country would not support annexing Israel to parts of the West Bank, because that would make achieving the two-state solution with the Palestinians more difficult.

And US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that it was up to Israel to annex parts of the West Bank, after President Donald Trump announced what he described as a peace plan that was rejected by the Palestinians altogether.

For his part, an Israeli analyst warned today, Monday, of a "deep rift" that Tel Aviv will face if it includes settlements in the occupied West Bank, expecting 6 other crises, including the possibility of Jordan suspending the peace treaty with Israel.

Ehud Yaari, commentator for Arab affairs on private channel 12, said that Israel’s move to push Jordan’s King Abdullah II to suspend the peace treaty with Israel signed in 1994.

Yaari pointed out that the annexation move would compel the leaders of Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states who oppose the refusal of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to develop their relations with Israel to return their accounts.

He expected that Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi would go out against the move, so that Turkey and Iran would not be monopolized by its opposition.

Yaari also expected that Western European countries would try to punish Israel by canceling or reducing Tel Aviv's cooperation with the European Union.

He added that the International Criminal Court in The Hague would join "the uproar, and even Israel's distant friends from Australia and India will have to respond."

But the main problem from Mr Yaari’s view in the United States is that if President Donald Trump can be re-elected in November, Israel will have time.

However, he added, Tel Aviv "will lose the opportunity to save the sympathy of the Democrats and much of the Jewish community."

Yaari added that if the supposed Democratic candidate wins the upcoming US presidential election, Joe Biden, whom he considered an old friend of Israel, he would publicly oppose the annexation step.

The Israeli analyst concluded that, sooner or later, a deep crack will occur if Israel annexes the settlements.

Palestinian estimates indicate that the Israeli annexation will reach more than 30% of the area of ​​the West Bank.