Huckabee visits Efrat as officials claim that US supports Israeli sovereignty over West Bank
Efrat
Council Chairman, Col. (res.) Dovi Shefler said that the visit came at a
time of "historic opportunity to apply full Israeli sovereignty over
Judea and Samaria."
SEPTEMBER 1, 2025

US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee with Efrat Regional Head Col. (Res.) Dovi Shefler. (photo credit:
EFRAT LOCAL COUNCIL)
Updated: SEPTEMBER 1, 2025 09:09
US Ambassador Mike Huckabee visited Efrat in the West Bank on Friday, the Efrat Municipality announced.
Huckabee
returned to the town for a social visit following a previous
declaration to buy a house there and participated in Shabbat prayers at
the Shirat David synagogue.
"US Ambassador Mike Huckabee's visit to Efrat
strengthens settlement in Judea and Samaria and illustrates the
importance of Efrat as a central axis in settlement," Efrat Council
Chairman, Col. (res.) Dovi Shefler said on the visit.
"This
is a time of historic opportunity to apply full Israeli sovereignty
over Judea and Samaria and thereby establish our national and
international status. Efrat is a magnet for Jews from both Israel and
abroad, and the ambassador’s visit is further proof of the importance
and resilience of the settlement."
Huckabee previously laid the cornerstone at a then-new neighborhood in Efrat and has joked about buying a home there.

US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee makes an official visit to the
West Bank on May 7, 2025. (credit: Courtesy of Yesha Council)
US reportedly supports Israeli sovereignty over West Bank
“I’m building because I one day might want to purchase a holiday home here in Efrat,” he joked in 2018.
“I
certainly can say that the president [Trump] would be very proud to see
beautiful, wonderful, thriving neighborhoods being built.”
Huckabee highlighted that the US would let Israel make its own decisions on the West Bank in a recent interview with The Jerusalem Post.
“That’s
really not the president’s style,” Huckabee said. “He may express his
own opinions, but he has not waded into the waters of saying, ‘You ought
to annex this or that.’ He just hasn’t. I think he respects that Israel
is a sovereign country.”
Several Israeli officials told the Post that the possibility of applying sovereignty “to certain areas” is being seriously considered, but Netanyahu has yet to make a final decision on the matter.
In
recent weeks, senior US officials have conveyed to their Israeli
counterparts that “the decision on sovereignty lies in Israel’s hands,”
according to two sources familiar with the discussions. These sources
added that while the message was not a full green light for any move, it
also wasn’t a red light. One official said, “The Americans are telling
Netanyahu and other senior Israeli officials: first decide what you want
– then talk to us.”
Amichai Stein and Alex Winston contributed to this report.