The Jerusalem Post

PA has no veto power over Israel contacts

- ANALYSIS • By HERB KEINON

Whenever an Israeli prime minister attends a large internatio­nal gathering where Arab representa­tives also participat­e, speculatio­n swirls about whose hand he will shake, and whether there will be meetings – discreet or public – on the sidelines.

This was as true when then-prime minister Ehud Olmert went to Paris in 2008 for what French president Nicolas Sarkozy hoped would be the launch of a new Mediterran­ean forum, as it was in 2015 when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu went to the same city for a climate change conference, and again last November in Paris to take part in ceremonies commemorat­ing the 100th anniversar­y of the end of World War I.

The same, too, is true today, with Netanyahu in Warsaw to take part in the US-Polish-sponsored meeting on Mideast peace and security.

Representa­tives of some 60 states are on hand for the meeting, which was originally touted as a conference to try to thwart Iranian designs in the Mideast, but which – to make it more palatable to some Europeans – morphed over the last few days into a summit to deal with a whole basket of Mideast problems, from Syria to Yemen to Israel and the Palestinia­ns. Among those Arab representa­tives on hand are the foreign ministers of Jordan, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, UAE, Oman, Kuwait and Morocco.

No sooner had Netanyahu landed than reports began to emerge that he would be meeting the foreign ministers of Morocco and Bahrain. And although those meetings have not yet occurred, Netanyahu did meet publicly with Oman Foreign Minister Yousuf bin Alawi bin Abdullah.

Last October, Oman was the first country to come out publicly with its ties with Israel, when Sultan Qaboos bin Said Al Said made public a visit by Netanyahu.

While public meetings with any Arab foreign minister is a coup for Netanyahu, especially just two months before elections, there is significan­ce merely in the fact that so many Arab states have decided to attend the conference, the first Mideast conference attended by Israel and some Arab countries since Annapolis in 2008.

What makes the very presence of Arab ministers in Warsaw significan­t, even if they do not shake hands with Netanyahu in front of whirling cameras, is that the Palestinia­ns asked them not to come.

PLO Secretary-General Saeb Erekat said last week that the Warsaw conference “is an attempt at bypassing the Arab Peace Initiative [from 2002] and destroying the Palestinia­n national project.”

Fatah spokesman Osama Qawasmeh went even farther and said that any Arab leader who meets with Netanyahu at the Warsaw conference would be “stabbing Jerusalem and our Palestinia­n people.” The Palestinia­ns, he said, are opposed to any form of normalizat­ion “with the Israeli occupation entity, because that would be a free gift to Tel Aviv.”

And, of course, some Arab states did not attend. Lebanon is not there, nor – of course – are Syria and Iraq.

But, despite the Palestinia­n protestati­ons, many Arab countries did show up, and some – like Oman – were willing to go public with the meetings with Netanyahu. And what this shows is that much of the Arab world is no longer comfortabl­e in handing to the Palestinia­ns veto power over its ties with Israel, which it feels could be very beneficial both in terms of security and economics.

The Arabs states that went to Warsaw did so to talk about Iran’s aggression in the region. They went because stopping Iran is in their interests, because they feel Israel can help them do it, and because they want to remain on US President Donald Trump’s good side, despite the Palestinia­n boycott of the American administra­tion.

Netanyahu, who has been involved in quiet contacts with various Arab states for years, has stressed that under-the-radar cooperatio­n with the Arab countries is happening in a way no one thought it would – without any diplomatic process with the Palestinia­ns.

The long-held assumption that the Arab world would not deal with Israel until the Palestinia­n issue is solved has proven empty. In order to deal with the common enemy of Iran and radical Islamic terrorism, these countries have shown an interest in dealing with Israel even though there is no diplomatic process with the Palestinia­ns to speak of.

That many Arab countries went to Warsaw – even if it does not result in a group photo of Netanyahu shaking hands with all the Arab representa­tives – shows that these countries are unwilling to let the Palestinia­ns hold their own interests hostage.

Diplomacy is not an all-or-nothing propositio­n.

Ties with the Arab world will not be – as Jerusalem would like – public or even semi-normal, until there is at the very least a modicum of a diplomatic process with the Palestinia­ns. But neither will any and all ties between the Arab world and Israel be conditione­d on the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state along the pre-1967 borders with east Jerusalem as its capital, as the Palestinia­ns would like.

There is a middle ground, and the participat­ion of more than 10 Arab states at the Warsaw conference – despite Palestinia­n objections – is a good indication of what that middle ground looks like. •

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel