The Jerusalem Post

Omani FM to Netanyahu: A new era in the Mideast

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF in Warsaw and MICHAEL WILNER in Frankfurt

There is a new era in the Middle East, Omani Foreign Minister Yousuf bin Alawi bin Abdullah told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu when the two met in Warsaw prior to the US-led ministeria­l meeting on Iran.

“This is an important and new vision for the future. People of the Middle East have suffered a lot because they are stuck to the past. This is a new era for the future and for prosperity for every nation,” the Omani foreign minister said during their meeting on Wednesday.

Netanyahu told Alawi that it was a delight to see him again.

“The courageous decision of Sultan Qaboos [bin Said] to invite me to Oman is changing the world,” Netanyahu said as he referenced his October visit to Muscat. “It’s pointing the way for many others to do what you said, not to be stuck in the past, but to seize the future.

“Many are following this lead, and may I say, including in this conference. I thank you for this positive policy that can lead to peace and prosperity for all,” Netanyahu added. “I want to thank you on behalf of the people of Israel, and I allow myself to say on behalf of many people in the Middle East.”

The prime minister is in Warsaw to attend

the Ministeria­l to Promote a Future of Peace and Security in the Middle East, which opens on Wednesday night and extends into Thursday.

“It is cold in Warsaw right now, but Israel’s foreign relations are warming up, warming up for the better,” Netanyahu said.

Netanyahu told Israeli reporters that he and the Omani foreign minister had spoken of steps the two countries, as well as others in the region, could take to advance mutual interests.

Representa­tives of Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Qatar, as well as the UK, South Korea, Brazil, Italy and Kenya, have chosen to attend, while several EU nations opted out due to concern over the conference’s focus on underminin­g the 2015 nuclear agreement with Iran to which they remain a party.

US Vice President Mike Pence who addressed the gathering said, “Tonight I believe we are beginning a new era with Prime Minister Netanyahu from the State of Israel, with leaders from Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, the UAE all breaking bread together and later in this conference sharing honest perspectiv­es on the challenge facing the region.”

“Poland and the US welcome this outward symbol of this gathering a symbol of cooperatio­n and a hopeful sign of a brighter future that awaits nations across the Middle East,” Pence said.

He added, “We are stronger together than we could ever be apart.”

Top Trump administra­tion officials arrived in Warsaw on Wednesday with talking points on Iran and harsh words for the Palestinia­ns, teasing only “a discussion” on the Middle East peace process ahead of an expected peace push later this year.

Senior advisers to the president Jared Kushner and Jason Greenblatt planned a soft launch of their long-awaited peace plan at a meeting hosted by Norway’s foreign minister, Ine Marie Eriksen Soreide, where they will discuss economic components of their proposal, officials said. But while both men plan on taking questions from gathered ministers, the administra­tion does not expect them to make significan­t news.

Greenblatt even downplayed the importance of the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict on Twitter en route to the conference, mocking the notion that it is at the core of the region’s problems and characteri­zing the Palestinia­ns as “isolated” from a growing Mideast alliance preoccupie­d by Iran.

“Iran is the primary threat to the future of regional peace and security,” wrote Greenblatt, increasing­ly vocal on Twitter in recent days. “That’s what Palestinia­ns don’t grasp; as a consequenc­e of being detached from new realities, we see Palestinia­ns increasing­ly left behind [and] more isolated than ever. Very unfortunat­e for the Palestinia­ns.”

Palestinia­n Authority officials are boycotting the conference, still dismissive of the administra­tion since its moves last year to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and move the US Embassy there.

While Kushner and Greenblatt will engage on the peace effort, Pence and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will lead conversati­ons on Iran, according to administra­tion officials. •

 ?? (Amos Ben-Gershom/GPO) ?? PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Omani Foreign Minister Yousuf bin Alawi bin Abdullah in Warsaw yesterday.
(Amos Ben-Gershom/GPO) PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Omani Foreign Minister Yousuf bin Alawi bin Abdullah in Warsaw yesterday.

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