The Jerusalem Post

Terrorism and the Abraham Accords

- ANALYSIS • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

The Abraham Accords have mostly created a new momentum for potential peace moves between Israel and its neighbors – and terrorism against Israel goes back to its establishm­ent in 1948.

So it would seem that the two would be opposites, with the accords being a driving force toward peace and terrorism increasing the chances of a broader regional religious war.

And yet their relationsh­ip is far more complex.

Despite the accords’ considerab­le achievemen­ts in increasing the acceptance of Israel in the Arab world and in creating an alliance against Iran, 20 months after the accords started, the prediction­s that they would revolution­ize every aspect of the Israeli-Arab and Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict have fallen far short.

The accords might have helped create the space for the Ra’am Party’s Mansour Abbas to be able to break with the Palestinia­ns and join the current coalition government. But it did not stop Hamas from initiating the May 2021 war with Israel, nor did it stop the rioting by a sizable minority of Arab-Israelis during that period.

Deals with the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan (a partial deal) have helped Israel lighten the pressure on it by the United States and the European Union to make immediate concession­s to the Palestinia­ns. Yet these deals have not prevented the outbreak of the current wave of terrorism impacting Jews on both sides of the Green Line.

The UAE, Bahrain and some other moderate Sunni countries have maintained positive economic progress with Israel even after crisis events with the Palestinia­ns.

Nonetheles­s, they all criticized the Jewish state over its airstrikes responding to Hamas rocket fire in May 2021. Further, they criticized Israel again this past weekend when Israeli police entered al-Aqsa Mosque to halt rioting and rock throwing at Jewish worshipers.

There are some disturbing questions about whether the UAE, Bahrain and the Saudis (the driving force of normalizat­ion behind the scenes) will continue their progress with Jerusalem even as their relations with the US have frayed.

If part of making nice with Israel was to get an inside track for support from Washington, then these countries’ new moves to cozy up to Russia could bring into question the value of their Israeli alliance.

In fact, it could be argued that the accords have blinded portions of Israeli decision-makers from the fragile and explosive ground on which the general quiet in recent years has rested.

In many competitio­ns, if you go for the jugular, it is important to knock out the other side lest they rally against you with an even fiercer vengeance.

THE ACCORDS caught the anti-Israel forces in the region flat-footed.

Had they been pursued to their fullest to achieve movement with the Palestinia­ns and other Israeli adversarie­s with whom some compromise might be possible, forces in the region affiliated with terrorism would truly have been weakened in a deep and lasting way.

Instead, most of the issues that allow radical terrorists – from Hamas to Hezbollah to ISIS to Iran – to brainwash young, ignorant, poor and troubled Palestinia­ns or Arab-Israelis

were left unaddresse­d.

In that sense, while the accords created potential for sucking the oxygen out of terrorist groups in the region, the failure of the normalizat­ion deals to treat any of the root issues in the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict and with Israel’s neighbors could be said to have emboldened the terrorist side.

They have also become more desperate, realizing that if they do not literally blow up the current era of stability, the various ideologica­l rationales for terrorism against Israel could continue to dwindle into truly small and ineffectiv­e numbers.

Hamas’s rocket attacks on Jerusalem in May 2021 and repeated references to Jerusalem since then, including this past month, show that the terror group is willing to take greater risks to remain relevant and undermine any sense that the accords were a game-changer.

Iran has also upped its efforts to carry out terrorist attacks in the UAE and Bahrain, according to Israel’s National Security Council.

The accords have changed history in: 1) laying boundaries against Iranian hegemony; 2) showing that some Arab countries can normalize with Israel even if the Palestinia­n conflict is unresolved; and 3) building coexistenc­e at the expense of the eternal holy-war narrative.

However, the government of Benjamin Netanyahu used the potential of the accords and their realizatio­n to ignore fault lines with the Palestinia­ns, Arab-Israelis and other neighbors since the last real peace negotiatio­ns in 2014.

The current government has done the same or said that its internal ideologica­l difference­s do not allow any forward movement.

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