The Jerusalem Post

Diplomatic winds are blowing in Israel’s favor

- By TOVAH LAZAROFF

The Palestinia­ns this week continued their very swift fall from internatio­nal grace, with consecutiv­e hits from both Europe and the Arab world.

For the last four years of the Trump administra­tion, the Palestinia­ns have sought solace from US rejection of its narrative by relying on those two tried- and- true allies.

It has long been an active part of Palestinia­n strategy to seek ways to show that Israel is isolated on the internatio­nal stage.

It is one of the reasons they have pushed, so repeatedly over the last decades, to pass resolution­s against Israel at the United Nations. With each massive vote count against the Jewish state, the Palestinia­ns subtly underscore the message that they possess what Israel lacks: internatio­nal legitimacy.

Among the most famous of these was the 2016 Security Council vote on Resolution 2334 condemning settlement activity. In that moment 14 hands out of the 15- member body were raised against Israel, in an almost j’accuse fashion. The only vote absent was the US, and even then it had lent its tacit support to the text.

But in hindsight, that vote, which was a massive victory for the Palestinia­ns, was one of the last moments of internatio­nal solidarity with regard to the narrative of the Israeli- Palestinia­n conflict, with Israel being blamed for the failure of the peace process.

From almost the moment he entered office, US President Donald Trump and his team began to whittle away at that paradigm, a move that created open hostility and ultimately a break in relations between the Palestinia­n Authority and the US.

The Palestinia­ns rebuffed all US peace plans, secure until recently in their support from the internatio­nal community, primarily Europe and the Arab world.

At the United Nations last month, PA President Mahmoud Abbas called for an internatio­nal peace conference on the basis of a twostate solution to the IsraeliPal­estinian conflict to be held in January, a move for which he received a certain amount of lip service, followed in general with anti- settlement and anti- annexation rhetoric.

But what followed this week was essentiall­y a double slap in the face to the Palestinia­ns, first from the Arab world, which the Palestinia­ns had already accused of betrayal, with the normalizat­ion deals between Israel and Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates without resolution of the Israeli- Palestinia­n conflict.

Although Saudi Arabia has not followed suit, the country’s Prince Bandar bin Sultan bin Abdulaziz gave a major interview to an Emiratibas­ed Saudi news outlet in which he blamed the Palestinia­ns for not making peace with Israel. He didn’t make do with just one throwaway line. He devoted an entire three- part series to the topic, going back through the history of the Jewish state and even before it.

Essentiall­y, Bandar breathed new life into the persistent Israeli charge that the Palestinia­ns “never miss an opportunit­y to miss

an opportunit­y.”

THE INTERVIEW took place on the sidelines of the triad meeting between German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas and his Israeli and United Arab Emirates counterpar­ts, Gabi Ashkenazi and Abdullah bin Zayed, respective­ly.

During the one- day event, the trio visited Berlin’s Holocaust Memorial, where the UAE foreign minister paid homage to the six million Jews who died during the Holocaust.

It was not a gesture of friendship but a nod in the direction of the Israeli “never again” narrative that links the survival of the Jewish

people with the survival of its modern state. It indicated that the UAE accepts Israel as a necessity for the Jewish people and not just as an unfortunat­e reality that the UAE must contend with. When he signed the guest book, Abdullah even used the phrase, most often quoted by Jews, “never again.”

On the diplomatic level the German- hosted meeting Tuesday marked the first high- level Israeli- UAE meeting since the September 15 signing of the peace agreement between the two countries. To the casual eye it almost seemed like the latest in a series of feel- good moments that have occurred

in the aftermath of the White House ceremony.

But the public speeches, with the three men at the podium, did not include any high- level representa­tion from the US, even though the deal was brokered by the Trump administra­tion.

Effectivel­y, this triad parley was a European show. It was, therefore, one of the most public gestures a European country has made to show its support for the US- backed Israeli- Arab normalizat­ion process.

Effectivel­y, Germany was letting the Palestinia­ns know they could no longer find a comforting shoulder to lean on in Berlin, in its battle with

the US against peace.

On the surface, Germany, along with Europe, has paid lip service to support for Palestinia­n principles. There should be a two- state solution at the pre- 1967 lines, a halt to settlement activity and, of course, no annexation.

But, so far, that support has rested on oral statements, not unlike those also made by the UAE and Bahrain, while at the same time advancing peace with Israel.

Germany is not alone on this score. Last week, European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, according to reports, rejected a Palestinia­n request for additional

Israeli- Arab money to help it protest pending Israeli annexation plans. Upon hearing that Israel planned to annex settlement­s, the PA stopped accepting Israeli transfers of its tax revenues, a move that has shaken its already fragile economy. Rather than support that move, the EU has let the Palestinia­ns know that now that Israel has suspended annexation, it should accept the tax transfers.

Borrell did this even though he had to have known that Israel planned to go ahead with approvals and advancemen­t of plans for upward of 4,430 West Bank settlement homes.

THE COMBINATIO­N of the Saudi and European messaging has almost seemed to have left the Palestinia­ns adrift without an oar in a new diplomatic sea.

Not everything, of course, is a loss. Arab states stood with the Palestinia­ns at the United Nations Human Rights Council and at the UN General Assembly at the end of last month to speak in support of two- states at the pre- 1967 lines. And Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions activity against Israel still continues unabated.

In an interview he gave to Middle East Monitor published Wednesday, legal expert Richard Falk, known for his extreme anti- Israel views, said, “Palestinia­ns are winning the legitimacy war.”

In 2016 and even a year ago, that line would have rung true. But read this week, it seemed almost out of context, as though it referenced a bygone era.

True, history has shown that diplomatic winds can change swiftly like a sudden tornado, but this week those winds appear to be suddenly blowing heavily in Israel’s favor.

 ?? ( Michele Tantussi/ Reuters) ?? UAE FOREIGN MINISTER Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al- Nahyan ( left) and his Israeli counterpar­t Gabi Ashkenazi greet as they visit the Holocaust memorial prior to their historic meeting in Berlin, this week.
( Michele Tantussi/ Reuters) UAE FOREIGN MINISTER Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al- Nahyan ( left) and his Israeli counterpar­t Gabi Ashkenazi greet as they visit the Holocaust memorial prior to their historic meeting in Berlin, this week.

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