Sun.Star Pampanga

Secret no more: Israel’s outreach to Gulf Arab states

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DWhile the visits by Netanyahu and his Likud Party ministers are a huge public relations boost for him domestical­ly, they do not immediatel­y signal an Arab embrace of Israel.

The Palestinia­n-Israeli conflict remains an emotional issue with the Arab public, and relations will likely remain limited without a peace agreement.

Israeli forces have killed over 160 Palestinia­ns during months of Hamas-led protests in the Gaza Strip against an Israeli blockade and a deepening humanitari­an crisis. The peace process has been frozen for years, and Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas cut ties with Washington after the White House recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital last year and moved its embassy to the city.

The Palestinia­ns fear that Trump is trying to rally support from Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states in order to pressure the Palestinia­ns into accepting a peace plan that falls far short of their demands.

In Muscat, Netanyahu’s meeting appeared aimed at dealing with the Palestinia­n-Israeli conflict and his close ties with the Trump administra­tion. With Netanyahu’s urging, the U.S. this year pulled out of the Iran nuclear deal, which Oman had supported.

After the visit, Oman’s Foreign Minister Yousef bin Alawi suggested the meeting was merely a strategic attempt at dealing with some of the Middle East’s most pressing issues. In an interview with Al-Jazeera, he said Netanyahu had initiated the meeting to present his views on Mideast issues to Sultan Qaboos.

“What Sultan Qaboos is doing now is nothing short of an interventi­on,” said Sigurd Neubauer, a Washington-based expert on Oman. “Oman is interjecti­ng itself into the Israeli-Palestinia­n peace process for one obvious reason, and that is (because) the Arab states are so divided.”

Oman is also the only Arab country in the Gulf that could have hosted Netanyahu without fear of destabiliz­ing backlash, Neubauer said.

That’s because Sultan Qaboos, in power since 1970, has direct lines of communicat­ion with a range of players in the region, thanks to his longstandi­ng policy of non-interferen­ce. Oman has brokered the release of Western hostages in Yemen and provided a back door for communicat­ions between Washington and Tehran under the Obama administra­tion. It is a member of the Saudi-led Gulf Cooperatio­n Council, but it did not join the kingdom in its boycott of Qatar or the war in Yemen.

Even statements by the Palestinia­n Fatah Party and Iran fell short of directly condemning Oman after Netanyahu’s visit, instead criticizin­g Israel’s attempts to normalize relations with Arab states before a peace deal is reached.

For Oman, hosting Netanyahu sent a message to the Trump administra­tion that Muscat is a valuable regional player.

“The currency is American currency,” Yoel Guzansky, a senior researcher at Israel’s Institute for National Security Studies, said. “Oman can show that it’s a gobetween, a conduit not just between Israel and the Palestinia­ns, but more ambitiousl­y between Iran and Israel.”

UBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — It was a scene unthinkabl­e just weeks ago: an Israeli Cabinet minister, tears of joy filling her eyes, proudly singing her country’s national anthem at a sports event in the heart of the Arab world.

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