The Jerusalem Post

Gantz ‘ concerned’ about retaining Israel’s QME

Engel: Inevitable that the Saudis will come to table

- • By GIL HOFFMAN and OMRI NAHMIAS

Defense Minister Benny Gantz is concerned about Israel maintainin­g its qualitativ­e military edge ( QME) in the Middle East after the US sells arms to the United Arab Emirates, he said Thursday at The Jerusalem Post Annual

Conference.

Gantz was interviewe­d by The Jerusalem Post editor- inchief Yaakov Katz earlier this week before leaving for the US for a meeting with Defense Secretary Mark Esper. “We must make sure our QME stays way ahead of other countries,” he said then.

On Thursday, Gantz praised the agreements Israel reached with the UAE and Bahrain,

calling their impact on Iran “a paradigm shift.”

“It signals to Iran that it is facing a whole block of moderate countries, and that is a great advantage,” he said.

Asked whether he was concerned about the future of bipartisan relations between Israel and the US, Gantz said for him, bipartisan support was like a religion.

“The bipartisan relationsh­ip is bigger than us and more important than us,” he said. “It is stronger than any government in Israel or the US.”

Also at the conference, Rep. Eliot Engel, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said he was concerned over news that the US plans to sell F- 35s to the UAE. He said he hopes more Arab countries will normalize relations with Israel.

Addressing the possibilit­y that Saudi Arabia might normalize ties with Israel, Engel said: “I think it is inevitable that the Saudis will come to the table.”

Regarding the possible sale of F- 35s to the UAE, he said: “I’m concerned about it because once you lose that qualitativ­e military edge, it’s a slippery slope. You need to work with these countries; they are our allies, and they are potential allies to Israel. But we just cannot do anything that could potentiall­y cause Israel to lose the qualitativ­e military edge.”

Engel, who lost his primary bid to progressiv­e candidate Jamaal Bowman in June, reflected on US- Israel ties after serving three decades in Congress.

“I take pride in the fact that the US and Israel are the closest friends,” he said. “It doesn’t really matter to me who’s elected and who’s not elected. I want the US- Israel relationsh­ip to be stronger and stronger, and I think I’ve been a strong part of it.”

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