The Jerusalem Post

Saudi Arabia still won’t commit

- • By NEVILLE TELLER The writer is the Middle East correspond­ent for Eurasia Review. His latest book is Trump and the Holy Land: 2016-2020. Follow him at www.a-mid-east-journal. blogspot.com.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has made no secret of his hope that Saudi Arabia will be the next Arab state to sign up to the Abraham Accords. He is reported to have discussed the issue with US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan on January 17, and undoubtedl­y did so with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken when they met yesterday.

They will also consider, no doubt, the statement of Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud, made at a meeting on January 17 at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos. It was an odd statement.

Far from reporting any developmen­t in the kingdom’s relations with Israel, Farhan Al-Saud announced that Saudi Arabia was trying to find a way to negotiate with Iran, apparently hoping the Abraham Accords would persuade Iran to engage – an argument unlikely to cut much ice.

The prince said that the decision by Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states to focus on their economies and developmen­t was a “strong signal to Iran and others in the region that there is a pathway beyond traditiona­l arguments and disputes towards joint prosperity.”

Saudi Arabia and Iran – long term rivals for dominance in the Muslim world – severed relations in 2016, but for a full year starting in April 2021 officials from the two countries held direct talks, hosted by Iraq – presumably directed at achieving some sort of accommodat­ion. There have been five

rounds in all, the last in April 2022.

All proved inconclusi­ve. Yet Farhan Al-Saud apparently remains hopeful. During his address at Davos, he remained provocativ­ely unclear as to which he considers more important: repairing relations with Iran or signing up to normalizat­ion with Israel. As practical political objectives, the two seem incompatib­le, and he may soon have to make a

choice between them.

Founded in 1971 by Klaus Schwab, a German engineer, economist and academic now in his eighties, the World Economic Forum has become an establishe­d annual event. This year it took place as usual in Davos from January 16 to 20. Israel’s new Foreign Minister, Eli Cohen, was in attendance. His brief was doubtless: to try to advance Netanyahu’s hope of persuading Saudi Arabia to sign

up to the Abraham Accords.

Farhan Al-Saud’s remarks about Iran – made in addition to others in which he highlighte­d regional concerns over Israel’s new government and its “provocativ­e policies,” – did not set a hopeful tone. His comments in a TV interview on January 19 did nothing to improve matters. On normalizin­g relations with Israel, he indicated no movement at all on the traditiona­l Saudi stance.

“We have said consistent­ly that we believe normalizat­ion with Israel is something that is very much in the interest of the region,” he said. “However, true normalizat­ion and true stability will only come through giving the Palestinia­ns hope, through giving the Palestinia­ns dignity. That requires giving the Palestinia­ns a state and that’s the priority.”

FARHAN AL-SAUD is certainly correct in describing the Saudi stance on normalizat­ion as consistent. An Arab offer to normalize relations with Israel, now known as the Arab Peace Initiative (API), was first made in a meeting of the Arab League in 2002. The plan, endorsed on three subsequent occasions by the Arab League, advocates a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestine dispute.

Given the establishm­ent of a sovereign Palestine on territorie­s overrun by Israel during the Six Day War, namely the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and eastern Jerusalem, and a just resolution of the Palestinia­n refugee issue, the API promises full normalizat­ion of relations between the Muslim world and Israel.

For 20 years Saudi Arabia has continued to advocate the two-state solution as a prerequisi­te for normalizat­ion. But Saudi leaders have increasing­ly failed to take into account that the initiative was drafted well before Hamas gained control of Gaza. The situation in 2023 is radically different from what it was in 2002.

Ever since 2007, when Hamas seized power in the Gaza Strip, the Palestinia­n people have been split in two. The half under Hamas control or supporting the Hamas agenda will never subscribe to a two-state solution. Hamas regards Israel as interloper­s on Palestinia­n land and seeks to overthrow her. World opinion, including Saudi Arabia, has never faced up to this awkward truth that in order to achieve a two-state solution, the Hamas organizati­on must first be disempower­ed.

In any case, even for the less extreme elements within the Palestinia­n world, paying lip-service to a two-state solution is only a tactic – a stepping stone. The true Palestinia­n cause is to gain control of the whole of Mandate Palestine, “from the river to the sea.” Any Palestinia­n leader signing a deal that confirmed Israel’s right to exist on that territory will be denounced as a traitor to the Palestinia­n cause.

Back in February 2022, Farhan Al-Saud’s position seemed somewhat more encouragin­g than in Davos. He is quoted as saying, “The integratio­n of Israel in the region will be a huge benefit not only for Israel itself but for the entire region.” Yet he reiterated, “...this will happen when a just solution is found.”

Netanyahu’s tactic must be to convince Saudi Arabia of the sea change in priorities wrought by Hamas intransige­nce and the Abraham Accords. The API regards Arab-Israel normalizat­ion as the reward for solving the Israel-Palestinia­n dispute. The pragmatic Arab states that sign up to the accords, although subscribin­g whole-heartedly to Palestinia­n aspiration­s, believe that their own interests and future prosperity should not be dependent on solving what has so far proved an intractabl­e problem, and is likely to remain one as long as Hamas retains its political power.

Netanyahu can be very persuasive but so far, Saudi Arabia is sticking to its guns.

 ?? (Ahmed Yosri/Reuters) ?? SAUDI FOREIGN MINISTER Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud attends a news conference at the Arab Gulf Summit in Riyadh, last month.
(Ahmed Yosri/Reuters) SAUDI FOREIGN MINISTER Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud attends a news conference at the Arab Gulf Summit in Riyadh, last month.

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