The National - News

Netanyahu is not an ally of the Arab world

▶ Alliances are built on common values and moral perspectiv­es – not shared antipathie­s

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Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s statement that Arab nations regard his country as an “indispensa­ble ally” in the struggle against the threat of Iranian aggression is an over-simplifica­tion. Despite the old proverb, the enemy of my enemy is not necessaril­y my friend, and certainly not while it continues with its decades-long policy of demeaning and oppressing Palestinia­n Arabs. To be an ally is to share much more than a single common threat. It is to stand on common ground defined by mutually respected principles and moral perspectiv­es. It requires a willingnes­s to acknowledg­e each other’s needs and ambitions and a readiness to co-operate and compromise in their pursuit.

This is not Israel’s relationsh­ip with the Arab world. Only Egypt and Jordan even have diplomatic ties with Israel. No Arab state that has any level of solidarity with the Palestinia­n people can truly be said to be an ally of an increasing­ly hardline, rightwing Israel. It is true that under its current leadership Iran poses a threat to the entire Middle East, as witnessed in its military meddling in Syria, Yemen and Afghanista­n and its political interferen­ce in Iraq. But Netanyahu’s claim that the mutual recognitio­n of that threat has caused “a revolution in relations with the Arab world” is wishful thinking.

It is revealing that Netanyahu’s statement was made during his visit to Brazil. He was one of few world leaders who accepted an invitation to attend the inaugurati­on of President Jair Bolsonaro, offering his implied blessing for the far-right policies of the apologist for Brazil’s former military dictatorsh­ips. Netanyahu’s comment offers more of an insight into Iran’s divisive influence in the region than it does into any perceived improvemen­t in relations between Israel and the Arab world. It may also reveal something of the increasing pressure under which Israel and its beleaguere­d prime minister is operating.

The economic and strategic landscape of the Middle East is changing. Saudi Arabia and the UAE, especially, are increasing­ly players to be reckoned with in regional and global politics, willing and able to project political influence and military force where necessary. The economic might of the UAE was cited in November in the largely fanciful Israeli plan, enthusiast­ically fronted by Netanyahu himself, “Tracks for Regional Peace” – a trans-Arabian railway system linking the Gulf states to Europe and beyond via Israeli ports on the Mediterran­ean. Perhaps the reality thinly concealed by Netanyahu’s “charm” offensive is that, faced with the threat of Iran, and the rising strength and influence of the Arab world, both he and Israel need all the friends in the region they can get. But as long as Israel continues to oppress the Palestinia­n people, treating them as unwelcome squatters in their own homeland, true friends are unlikely to be found in the Arab world.

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