Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday that he and President Trump “see eye-to-eye” about the danger-fraught Middle East — two days before the two leaders to meet in Washington.

“President Trump and I see eye-to-eye on the dangers emanating from the region,” Netanyahu said, the Times of Israel reported. “But also on the opportunities. And we’ll talk about both, as well as upgrading the relations between Israel and the United States in many, many fields.”

While “the alliance between Israel and America has always been extremely strong,” he said at Ben Gurion Airport, it was “about to get even stronger.”

Netanyahu sidestepped a question on whether he still supports the creation of a Palestinian state, Reuters reported.

He has never publicly abandoned his conditional backing Palestinian statehood, but Palestinians say that commitment has been made worthless by Israeli settlement building on occupied territory.

Asked if he still backed the so-called two-state solution, Netanyahu told accompanying reporters: “Come with me — you’ll hear very clear answers.”

Hours before his departure for his Wednesday meeting with Trump, Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan told Army Radio that “all members of the security cabinet, and foremost the prime minister, oppose a Palestinian state.”

Education Minister Naftali Bennett and Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked urged Netanyahu during a Sunday cabinet meeting to end his public support for Palestinian statehood.

Netanyahu reportedly told the Jewish Home ministers he would voice his commitment to the two-state solution, but also would hammer home the Palestinians’ reluctance to reach a peace deal as they refuse to recognize Israel as a Jewish state.

He also tried to dampen expectations on the far-right, according to purported leaks from the closed-door meeting first reported by Israel’s Channel 2.

Far-right partners in Netanyahu’s coalition have called for parts of the West Bank to be annexed, a demand he has resisted.

Last month, Israel’s Haaretz newspaper said Netanyahu — in a closed-door meeting with Likud ministers — coined the term”Palestinian state-minus” to describe his vision of limited Palestinian sovereignty in the territory, Reuters reported.

The prime minister acknowledged that the Trump administration is friendlier than that of Barack Obama, but cautioned that it would not accept unlimited construction in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

He cautioned ministers against pushing the Jewish state into a confrontation with Trump.

“Trump believes in a deal and in running peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians,” Netanyahu was quoted as saying. “We should be careful and not do things that will cause everything to break down. We mustn’t get into a confrontation with him.”

Trump, who voiced his staunch support for Israel during the presidential campaign, last week said a settlement expansion could hurt the chances of reaching a peace accord with Palestinians.

“They [settlements] don’t help the process,” Trump said in an interview published Friday by the Israel Hayom newspaper.

Since Trump took office Jan. 20, Netanyahu has approved construction of 6,000 homes in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, drawing international condemnation that the White House did not join.

As he boarded his plane Monday, Netanyahu said he had consulted with a large number of agencies and fellow ministers, but stressed that he alone would eventually determine how to steer Israeli policy during the Trump era.

“We had many discussions ahead of this visit, with the heads of the security establishment, the National Security Council, the Foreign Ministry, and of course yesterday at the cabinet — a thorough, deep, serious discussion,” he told reporters in Hebrew.

“At the end of the discussion [in the cabinet], I said something I want to share with you,” he said. “I’m paraphrasing: I said I will lead and I will chart the course. That’s exactly what I intend to do, to lead and chart this historic alliance between Israel and the US for the national interest of Israel, and of course, for all Israeli citizens.”

Netanyahu is scheduled to meet Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Tuesday and Trump on Wednesday, as well as Democratic and Republican congressional leaders.

Meanwhile, Politico reported Monday that Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn) said that when he met with Trump in November to discuss the position of secretary of state, Trump’s team was committed to moving the US Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

“They were ready to move the embassy at 12:01 on Jan. 20, maybe 12 and 30 seconds,” Corker told Politico. “That was going to be their first move.”

Corker said there is still a chance Trump will move the embassy — but only after hearing objections from Arab allies as well as his face-to-face meeting with Netanyahu.

“My sense is, they’re probably still moving there,” he said.