MK Smotrich
MK SmotrichMiriam Alster/Flash 90

If he doesn't start doing something substantive to stop terror, said MK Bezalel Smotrich, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu may find himself without a coalition majority – because he will not support a government that is not doing its utmost to fight terror.

Smotrich laid out his position in a Facebook message directed at Netanyahu earlier Sunday. “The Jewish Home Party, of which I am a member, has made very clear and specific demands for security. We have demanded that you no longer prevent security forces from doing their job in fighting terrorism; that you allow building in all of Judea and Samaria, without any limitations; and that you return all the terrorists freed in the Gilad Shalit deal to prison.

Smotrich said that those conditions were the “minimum that needed to be done right now.” While he couldn't speak for the rest of his party, said Smotrich, “don't assume I am going to vote with your coalition on other issues if you do not intend to act appropriately,” he wrote.

Netanyahu, on his way back to Israel from attending the UN General Assembly in New York, said earlier Sunday in response to the terror attacks of recent days that “we are waging a bitter war against terror - and we will do so vigorously.” The “'moderates' of the Palestinian Authority and [our] alleged peace partner," the Prime Minister charged. "I am now on my way to Israel and when I arrive I will head immediately to the Kirya to meet with top security officials to adjudicate a harsh response to Palestinian Islamic terrorism.”

Rabbi Nehemia Lavi, 41, and Aharon Banita Bennett, 21, were both murdered as a result of Saturday’s terrorist attack. Bennett's wife, Adelle Banita, 22, and their two-year-old son were also injured. Later Saturday night, an Arab terrorist attempted to stab a Jewish youth in central Jerusalem.