Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has voiced strong sympathy for the “desires” of secessionist Kurds as Iraq’s Kurdistan Region moves to freeze the results of a contentious independence vote in favor of national dialog.

“The Kurds demonstrate national maturity and international maturity,” Netanyahu told the Israeli parliament (Knesset) in Jerusalem al-Quds on Tuesday.

“We have very great sympathy for their desires and the world needs to concern itself with their safety and with their future,” he added.

The Israeli premier was speaking during a memorial ceremony for far-right former tourism minister Rehavam Ze’evi, who was assassinated in 2001.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (Photo by AFP)

Ze’evi went on a secret mission to the Iraqi Kurdish Region in the 1960s and supervised the establishment of an Israeli military “field hospital” there, Netanyahu said.

During the visit, Ze’evi “came face to face with warm expressions of support for Israel which continue to this day,” Netanyahu noted.

The memorial coincided with news that Iraq’s Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) decided to postpone planned legislative elections for eight months amid tensions with the central government in Baghdad.

The KRG later proposed to freeze the results of its September 25 independence referendum and start “an open dialogue between the government of Kurdistan and the central government on the basis of the constitution.”

Baghdad views the plebiscite as illegal and wants the KRG to annul the results.

Kurdish Peshmerga forces take part in a gathering to urge people to vote in the independence referendum in Erbil, Iraq, September 20, 2017. (Photo by AFP)

The Iraqi government responded to the referendum by taking a number of punitive measures, including a campaign to seize back positions held by Kurdish forces since 2014, when they joined the fight against Daesh terrorists.

Except for Israel, the entire international community, particularly Iraq’s neighbors, have voiced opposition to Kurdistan’s ambitions for separation from the mainland, warning that such a move could complicate counterterrorism operations in the Arab state.

Netanyahu went against the global tide back in September and publicly voiced support for what he called the “legitimate efforts of the Kurdish people to attain a state of its own.”

Earlier this month, Israeli officials told Reuters that Netanyahu had been lobbying world powers to garner support for the secession bid and prevent further setbacks to the Kurds as they lost ground to the Iraqi army.

The premier is not the only Israeli official who has been trying to add fire to the flames and escalate the tensions by making provocative remarks. Just a few days ago, Israel’s Transportation and Intelligence Minister Yisrael Katz said, “The issue at present is ... to prevent an attack on the Kurds, extermination of the Kurds and any harm to them, their autonomy and region.”

An unnamed Israeli regime official has also stressed that it would be best if someone gave the Kurds “weaponry, and whatever else.”