Business Day

Israeli minister warms Arab ties

- Jeffrey Heller Jerusalem

An Israeli cabinet minister’s visit to Abu Dhabi’s grand mosque gave more momentum on Monday to Israel’s diplomatic push in the Gulf, where it sees Arab states as its natural allies against regional powerhouse Iran.

“I am happy that I was privileged to be the first senior official from Israel to sign the mosque’s guest book,” sports minister Miri Regev wrote on Facebook about the tour, which she said took place on Sunday.

On Sunday, Regev, in the United Arab Emirates for a judo tournament, fought back tears after Israel’s team won gold in the Abu Dhabi Grand Slam, a feat that allowed the Israeli national anthem to be played in a country that does not formally recognise it.

Her attendance at the event and the judo win were portrayed in Israel as a diplomatic achievemen­t in a region where prospectiv­e allies have been reluctant to lift the veil on what Israeli officials say have been years of covert contacts.

Shining a rare spotlight on direct ties with Gulf states, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, announced on Friday he had just returned from a surprise visit to Oman, the first time an Israeli leader has visited the sultanate in 22 years.

Netanyahu has on several occasions hinted at warmer relations with Gulf states. He told Israel’s parliament last week that due to fears of a nuclear threat from Iran, “Israel and other Arab countries are closer than they ever were before”.

Israel has diplomatic relations with only two Arab states, neighbouri­ng Egypt and Jordan.

Netanyahu’s intensifie­d outreach in the Gulf comes amid speculatio­n in Israel that he could call an early election ahead of polls due no later than November 2019. Any normalisat­ion of ties with Arab states in the Gulf could be a political boost at home, where he has also portrayed tighter ties as a way forward to a broad peace after direct peace talks with the Palestinia­ns collapsed in 2014.

On Facebook, Regev posted a video that showed her standing inside Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque next to a man who appeared to be Mohamed Bin Thaloob al-Dera, president of the UAE Wrestling Judo and Kickboxing Federation, and another man whom she identified as a mosque official.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa