The Jerusalem Post

Cabinet to vote on UAE peace agreement next week

Seven- page deal avoids possible controvers­ial topics

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

The cabinet will hold a vote on Israel’s peace treaty with the United Arab Emirates on Monday, the Prime Minister’s Office announced on Monday.

There has not been a full cabinet meeting since Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu returned from the signing ceremony at the White House, almost a month before the planned vote. The agreement is expected to get unanimous support from the ministers.

Netanyahu promised Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi in September that the agreement would go to a cabinet vote, and the Prime Minister’s Office legal adviser said that he may bring it to the Knesset for approval, as well.

The seven- page “Treaty of Peace, Diplomatic Relations and Full Normalizat­ion Between the United Arab Emirates and The State of Israel” avoids any topics that may be controvers­ial, such as a Palestinia­n state or American weapons sales to Abu Dhabi.

The agreement has its signatorie­s commit to “continuing their efforts to achieve a just, comprehens­ive, realistic and enduring solution to the Israeli- Palestinia­n conflict” and to “working together to realize a negotiated solution to the Israeli- Palestinia­n conflict that meets the legitimate needs and aspiration­s of both peoples, and to advance comprehens­ive Middle East peace, stability and prosperity.”

The agreement does not mention that Israel would be suspending its plans to extend sovereignt­y to parts of Judea and Samaria, though the original normalizat­ion announceme­nt said that is the case.

Also not mentioned in the agreement were any arms sales, including F- 35 jets that the UAE seeks to purchase from the US. The Israeli position is that doing so would threaten its qualitativ­e military edge in the Middle East, an advantage guaranteed under US law. The US has said they would like to sell the warplanes while finding a way to maintain Israel’s advantage.

The document also emphasizes interfaith tolerance in the Middle East.

The treaty says that the parties are “Recognizin­g that the Arab and Jewish peoples are descendant­s of a common ancestor, Abraham, and inspired, in that spirit, to foster in the Middle East a reality in which Muslims, Jews, Christians and peoples of all faiths, denominati­ons, beliefs and nationalit­ies live in, and are committed to, a spirit of coexistenc­e, mutual understand­ing and mutual respect.”

The sides agreed to establishi­ng peace, diplomatic relations and normalizat­ion, to exchanging ambassador­s and opening embassies, and cooperatin­g in various spheres, including finance and investment, civil aviation, consular services, innovation trade and economic relations, healthcare, science, technology and “peaceful uses of outer space,” education and more.

As for Netanyahu’s commitment to bring the matter to the government and Knesset, the treaty states that it “shall be ratified by both parties as soon as practicabl­e in conformity with their respective national procedures and will enter into force following the exchange of instrument­s of ratificati­on.”

 ?? ( Tom Brenner/ Reuters) ?? THE ABRAHAM ACCORDS ceremony in Washington last month. The ‘ Treaty of Peace, Diplomatic Relations and Full Normalizat­ion Between the UAE and The State of Israel’ avoids any topics that may be controvers­ial, such as a Palestinia­n state or American weapons sales to Abu Dhabi.
( Tom Brenner/ Reuters) THE ABRAHAM ACCORDS ceremony in Washington last month. The ‘ Treaty of Peace, Diplomatic Relations and Full Normalizat­ion Between the UAE and The State of Israel’ avoids any topics that may be controvers­ial, such as a Palestinia­n state or American weapons sales to Abu Dhabi.

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