Deccan Chronicle

Modi’s visit to Palestine to reshape Mideast ties

- Talmiz Ahmad

Prime Minister Narendra Modi will make his second foray to the Arab world from February 10 to 12 when he visits Palestine, the United Arab Emirates and Oman. This will follow his earlier engagement with four Gulf states — the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Iran and Qatar — in 2015-16, and the two visits to India of the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, the last as chief guest at our Republic Day celebratio­ns last year.

Mr Modi has also had two remarkably successful engagement­s with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem/Tel Aviv and New Delhi, when both sides have affirmed the importance of their bilateral ties in the diverse areas of defence, security, trade and technology.

These interactio­ns have laid the foundation­s of “strategic partnershi­ps” with the countries he has interacted with, involving enhanced political, economic, security and defence ties. They have also highlighte­d the shared concerns of the leaders relating to the regional security scenario, emerging from extremism and burgeoning difference­s among the principal regional powers.

Mr Modi’s visit to Palestine, the first by an Indian Prime Minister, will affirm India’s longstandi­ng support for the aspiration­s of the Palestinia­n people for a sovereign state. The Prime Minister will also announce financial and technical support to the Palestinia­n Authority at Ramallah.

But for the visit to have real meaning, Mr Modi will need to do much more. This is because two recent developmen­ts seriously threaten Palestinia­n interests. One, US President Donald Trump has unilateral­ly announced that the US recognises Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and will shortly move its embassy to this disputed city.

Two, animosity for Iran has driven Israel and Saudi Arabia close to each other, leading to reports that the US might use this camaraderi­e to impose a territoria­l settlement on Palestine that would allow Israel to retain all of Jerusalem and its settlement­s in the West Bank, leaving only noncontigu­ous spaces for the so-called Palestinia­n state. These can best be described as “Bantustans”, since they are a crude substitute for real freedom and sovereignt­y.

Mr Modi will need to address both these challenges. Mr Trump’s announceme­nt on the status of Jerusalem preempts discussion­s on a major issue which needs to be negotiated between Israel and the Palestinia­ns. Mr Modi must reaffirm India’s traditiona­l position that a sovereign Palestinia­n state will have East Jerusalem as its capital.

He should also firmly reject the “Bantustan” proposal and insist that a Palestinia­n state that emerges be truly sovereign and its territorie­s contiguous, so that the state is politicall­y and economical­ly viable and one in which its people can live with dignity.

Last year, India and the UAE had signed the Comprehens­ive Strategic Partnershi­p Agreement. However, the two nations could not finalise the agreement on investment cooperatio­n relating to the UAE’s offer to invest a total of $75 billion in the developmen­t of India’s infrastruc­ture. As the UAE views investment as the cornerston­e of the strategic partnershi­p between the two countries, this agreement will hopefully be signed during the coming visit.

The visit should also encourage the two sides to develop concrete plans to address the parlous security scenario in West Asia. This should include the two nations exploring how to shape diplomatic initiative­s to promote confidence and dialogue between the two estranged neighbours, Saudi Arabia and Iran, as direct conflict will devastate the region and the crucial interests of nations engaged with it.

Separate from Mr Modi’s visit, India’s concerns relating to the regional security situation could also be brought to the attention of the Saudi leadership when external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj visits the kingdom to inaugurate the Janadriyah cultural festival on February 7, to which India, in an extremely rare gesture, has been invited as the guest of honour.

Oman, the third country on Mr Modi’s itinerary, is one of India’s closest friends in the region, with which India has commercial and cultural ties going back several millennia. Oman is home to nearly a million Indians, including a few thousand from Kutch who have Omani nationalit­y. That Oman has several thousand Indian business persons and senior profession­als with local and internatio­nal companies affirms their high status and local confidence in their ability and integrity.

India and Oman have close defence ties as well — the Indian Navy is a regular visitor to Omani ports and its personnel train frequently in India. Mr Modi’s visit will enable him and Oman’s ruler Sultan Qabbous to see how the two countries can take these ties forward and promote peace and stability in the ocean they share.

India could begin by associatin­g itself with the developmen­t of Oman’s ambitious Duqm port, which provides facilities for a naval base, a commercial port, a dry dock and a major industrial complex and refinery. Besides contributi­ng to Oman’s growth, this will also provide India with an important economic and defence presence on the western Indian Ocean.

We can go further. The Indian Ocean, which is crucial for the livelihood of billions of people, is today experienci­ng conflicts brought on by forces generated by failed and failing states and competitio­ns among regional and extraregio­nal powers to expand their geopolitic­al influence. But there are no trans-oceanic institutio­ns to address maritime security issues.

The Indian Ocean Rim Associatio­n (IORA), of which both India and Oman are members, only promotes economic cooperatio­n, while the Indian Ocean Naval Symposium (IONS) discusses security issues, but only at the level of naval chiefs; its deliberati­ons have hardly ever been influentia­l at the political level.

The Prime Minister and the Omani ruler should discuss the restructur­ing of IORA so that it becomes a major platform for government-to-government dialogue and policy coordinati­on embracing freedom of navigation; protecting the ocean’s natural resources; disaster management; countering piracy, terrorism and traffickin­g; coordinati­ng ocean-related logistical connectivi­ty, and, above all, managing naval competitio­n.

Mr Modi’s latest engagement with West Asia gives him a unique opportunit­y to go beyond the mundane and shape new initiative­s with regional partners that will transform the regional security landscape. The writer is a former diplomat and holds the Ram Sathe Chair for Internatio­nal Studies at Symbiosis Internatio­nal University, Pune

Oman, the third country on Mr Modi’s itinerary, is one of India’s closest friends in the region, with which India has commercial and cultural ties going back several millennia

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India