The Arab states, Israel and the Palestinians
Summary: some Arab regimes have continued to develop their
relations with Israel despite the latter’s conduct towards the
Palestinians. But there’s a limit to how far they will go.
We are again grateful to Greg Shapland for the posting below. He is a
writer on politics, security and resources in the MENA region. He was
Head of Research Analysts in the FCO from 2010-13 and is now an
Associate Fellow at Chatham House.
We last looked at the role of the Arab states in Israeli-Palestinian
peace-making some 18 months ago: see “Israeli-Palestinian peace-making:
the role of the Arab states” of 3 April 2018, which provided a potted
history of the topic, and “Israel, the Palestinians and the Arab states”
of 17 April 2018, which offered three possible scenarios for the
evolution of the situation.
In the last 18 months, several Arab states have shown themselves
ready to develop their relations with Israel in a much more open manner
than before. Among the most striking examples of this trend are:
- The visit of Miri Regev, then Israeli Minister of culture and sports, to the UAE
in October 2018, on the occasion of the participation of an Israeli
judoka in an international judo competition. (The Israeli competitor won
gold and his country’s national anthem was duly played to mark his achievement.)
- PM Netanyahu’s visit to Oman later in the same month;
- In November 2018, the participation of Israel Katz, then Minister
of Transport and Intelligence, in a transportation conference in Oman ;
- Statements by the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and the UAE
in support of Israel’s right to exist and defend itself, at the Middle
East summit in Warsaw in February this year (although the three foreign
ministers do not appear to have expected these statements to become
public);
- Qatar’s hosting of international sporting competitions with Israeli participation in March and September this year. Hamas
issued an expression of regret that Qatar had allowed Israeli athletes
to take part in the September event and the Israeli flag to be flown,
“while the Israeli occupation is committing crimes and violations
against the Palestinians and holy sites and imposing a tight siege on
Gaza”;
- A tweet by Bahrain’s
Foreign Minister Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa expressing understanding
for Israel’s military response to Hizbullah’s firing of anti-tank
missiles into Israel in early September this year;
- Egyptian and Jordanian agreements to buy gas from Israel.
These states may have chosen this path for a number of reasons. The
most important was almost certainly the hope of securing Israeli support
in countering the
Iranian
threat. Another reason was probably a wish to curry favour with the
Trump Administration, again mainly with a view to gaining an ally
against Iran. Frustration at the inability of the Palestinians to settle
their internal differences and despair at the lack of prospects of a
resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict must also play a part in
inclining the regimes concerned to accord a higher priority to their own
interests, whether strategic or economic.
Whatever the mix of motives, in none of the cases outlined above does there seem to have been any attempt to seek a
quid pro quo in
terms of a greater willingness on Israel’s part to negotiate peace with
the Palestinians or to refrain from steps (such as the continued
building of settlements) that would make a peace agreement harder to
reach. Nor do most of the Arab regimes concerned seem to have made any
concerted effort to persuade Israel to moderate its treatment of
Palestinians, for example, the demonstrators at the Gaza border fence.
This does not mean that there are no limits to the extent to which
Arab states are prepared to go, in developing closer relations with
Israel. Of those states cited in the examples above,
Saudi Arabia
showed where its own limits lay in December 2018, when it forfeited the
right to host an international chess tournament rather than allow
Israeli competitors to take part. (The Saudis’ reluctance to countenance
the public presence of Israelis on their soil may be driven by concern
for their standing in the Muslim world.) Even those Gulf countries which
have hosted events in which Israelis have participated have fought shy
of the establishment of full diplomatic relations. In practical terms,
there is no need for them to do so. They are already assumed to be
getting
intelligence and security support from Israel and it is not clear what benefit full normalisation would bring.
Israel Katz, Israel’s Foreign Minister, confirmed that he had discussed, at his initiative, the possible signing of bilateral “
non-aggression” treaties
with certain Arab Gulf states. These treaties would, Katz tweeted, “end
the conflict and enable civilian cooperation until the signing of peace
agreements”, an implicit admission that these states would not be
prepared to sign full peace treaties in the absence of a resolution of
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The reaction of the Arab Gulf states
to Katz’s proposal does not seem to have been reported in the media and
he may well have been overstating the progress made in the talks, as
Israeli ministers have a tendency to do.
Moreover, most Arab states have shown no desire to get closer to
Israel. The majority of these, being not threatened by Iran, would see
no purpose in taking steps in this direction, while there would be some
risk of provoking a hostile public reaction. The territory of three Arab
states (Syria, Lebanon and Iraq) has recently come under Israeli
military attack: for them, the question of warmer relations does not
arise. Other Arab countries (such as Yemen, Libya and Algeria) are
preoccupied with their own internal problems.
What has generally been lacking, however, is active governmental
support for the Palestinian cause, as opposed to lip service. Arab
states have continued to issue statements condemning Israeli moves that
would make a peace agreement harder to achieve but without any
suggestion that there would be a penalty involved. One recent example
was Netanyahu’s pledge (on 10 September) to
annex the Jordan valley:
a meeting of Arab League foreign ministers described the pledge as “a
new Israeli aggression” that would undermine the chances of any progress
in the peace process and will torpedo all its foundations”. Despite the
apparent seriousness of the question, there was nothing to indicate
that there would any penalty to pay, if Israel was to go ahead.
If it is generally true that Arab states do little or nothing in
support of the Palestinians or their cause, there are some qualified
exceptions.
Kuwait
is one. It has not sought to establish closer relations with Israel.
Moreover, in June last year, Kuwait used its position on the UN Security
Council to introduce a draft resolution deploring Israel’s “excessive,
disproportionate and indiscriminate use of force” against Palestinian
civilians, only to have it vetoed by the US. In so doing, Kuwait was
reported to have annoyed the Trump Administration and embarrassed US
peace envoy Jared Kushner – something other Arab Gulf states have been
careful not to do.
Qatar, in seeking to improve living conditions for Gazans, is another
partial exception. But perhaps the most complex and delicate position
is that of Jordan which has felt compelled to take Israel to task over
its conduct towards the Palestinians and the Muslim Holy Places in
Jerusalem but has, at the same time, vital security and economic
interests to protect in maintaining the relationship with Israel. This
Jordanian dilemma, 25 years on from the signing of the 1994 peace
treaty, will be the subject of a forthcoming post.
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