The National - News

Embassy move ‘risks burning Arab bridges’

- CALINE MALEK

Donald Trump’s decision to move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem risks burning the bridges he has built with Arab allies since taking office, according to a former American defence secretary.

Dr Robert Gates said he was worried the president’s move “has created problems for our Arab friends and allies”.

“It hurts broader strategy in two ways,” Dr Gates, who served under George W Bush and Barack Obama, told the Arab Strategy Forum in Dubai yesterday.

“There was a general sense that this administra­tion was devoting additional time and energy to try to bring about a solution that the last several presidents tried, but failed.

Mr Trump’s Jerusalem announceme­nt, he said, “makes it much, much harder”.

“One of the achievemen­ts of the Trump administra­tion has been to significan­tly improve the relationsh­ip between the US and Arabs, especially here in the Gulf, as well as Israel.

“Those relationsh­ips were deeply affected by Obama’s agreement to the nuclear deal with Iran, and while this announceme­nt won’t reverse that, it makes the political lives of our friends out here more complicate­d and difficult, especially in dealing with the emotions of their own population­s.”

Dr Gates’s comments came after Arab foreign ministers on Sunday called on Mr Trump to rescind the embassy decision, saying at an emergency meeting of the Arab League that it could plunge the region into “more chaos, violence, bloodshed and instabilit­y”.

Also on Sunday, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, said it could “throw a lifeline to terrorists and armed groups”, while Dr Anwar Gargash, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, described it as a “gift to radicals”.

Also speaking at the forum yesterday was former French president Francois Hollande, who said the issue would loom large over diplomatic talks and alliances in the coming year.

“It will be subject to all the debates, especially at the United Nations, and it will provoke certain protests and trouble in 2018, in many countries where population­s are in solidarity with the Palestinia­n state,” he said.

“But there will be no serious evolution in the case next year, firstly because the Israeli government is moving farther away from a two-state solution, and because Palestinia­ns are themselves divided.

“And it is very difficult for the Palestinia­n Authority [to bring up] the question of negotiatio­ns again.”

After the failed terrorist attack on a bus station in New York yesterday, Mr Hollande said he feared attempted atrocities would only continue.

“Although weakened and eradicated in Syria, those terrorists want to target large capitals and cities,” he said.

“Their capacity to carry out terrorist attacks in countries like France is largely compromise­d, but the possibilit­y of certain individual­s, whether isolated or not, to carry out attacks could lead to a lot of damage and should be seen as possible anywhere.”

Former ISIL fighters fleeing the battlegrou­nds of Syria and Iraq pose a challenge to security services.

“We need to follow those who leave Iraq and Syria and go back to their countries, whether Russia, Europe or Arab countries, and pay attention to their behaviour, especially those in rehabilita­tion and deradicali­sation centres,” he said.

“We need to take some cyber security measures, always be vigilant and deploy all of our capacity to defend our countries.”

Dr Gates went on to say that lone wolf or small cell terrorist attacks will “achieve their purpose of terror, but the opportunit­y for an organisati­on like ISIL to create weapons of mass destructio­n has been dramatical­ly reduced by the destructio­n of the caliphate”.

“We should be realistic that the eliminatio­n of terrorism is not an achievable objective.”

He said that Iran was expected to continue creating regional tensions, especially regarding Saudi Arabia.

“We’ll see an intensific­ation of the contest between Shia Islam led by Iran and Sunni Islam led by Saudi,” Dr Gates said.

“We’ve seen an intensific­ation over the past year through surrogates such as in Yemen and we’ll see more of that in 2018. Iran is emboldened by its success in Syria and you’ll see an increasing­ly assertive Iran in terms of its interferen­ce in the region.

“You’ll also see a growing probabilit­y of conflict between Israel and Hizbollah, feeling empowered by their success in Syria, greatly strengthen­ed by weapons and training from Iran, and Israel will see Hizbollah as an increasing­ly difficult problem that they’ll need to deal with at some point.”

Dr Gates said that “Trump reminds me of [Richard] Nixon, without the deep background in internatio­nal affairs, more as a personalit­y”.

“He will still be president a year from now, but the US will remain divided and to a large extent paralysed with a somewhat uncertain foreign policy,” he said.

Francois Hollande said even fragmented terrorist groups remain a threat to peace across globe

 ??  ?? Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, with the former French president Francois Hollande, at the Arab Strategy Forum in Dubai yesterday. Former US defence secretary Robert Gates was also in attendance Wam
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, with the former French president Francois Hollande, at the Arab Strategy Forum in Dubai yesterday. Former US defence secretary Robert Gates was also in attendance Wam
 ?? Arab Strategy Forum ?? Former French president Francois Hollande and former US secretary of defence Robert Gates at the Arab Strategy Forum in Dubai yesterday
Arab Strategy Forum Former French president Francois Hollande and former US secretary of defence Robert Gates at the Arab Strategy Forum in Dubai yesterday

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