The Jewish Chronicle

Visit proves Israel and Saudis have new relationsh­ip goals

- BYANSHELPF­EFFER JERUSALEM

THE VISIT of a Saudi delegation to Israel has marked the growing links between the countries.

The group was not an official one, but would have needed the authorisat­ion of the Kingdom’s leadership and is a sign of the quiet but intensifyi­ng relationsh­ip between Jerusalem and Riyadh.

Led by a retired Saudi Major-General, Anwar Eshki, the delegation included academics and businesspe­ople.

As there are no official diplomatic relations between the two countries, last week’s meetings in Jerusalem were held at hotels, rather than at the Foreign Ministry, and were conducted below ministeria­l level.

Among others, the group met Foreign Ministry Director-General Dore Gold and IDF Major-General Yoav Mordechai, as well as a number of Knesset members from various parties. Anwar Eshki meeting Dore Gold last year. They held talks again last week

While no details have emerged of the discussion­s, the importance of the visit is in its very existence.

Some Saudi media criticised the group’s arrival in Israel, as did the Israeli Communist Party, which accused the delegation of “normalisin­g” but the unpreceden­ted trip highlighte­d how the two countries have grown closer in recent years and are co-operating on joint regional interests, most specifical­ly countering Iranian influence.

In an interview during the visit, General Eshki said that “there will be no peace with the Arab countries before there is peace with the Palestinia­ns”.

He said that the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict “is not the source of terrorism, but it does create fertile ground for acts of terrorism in the region.

“If the conflict is resolved, the countries that exploit the Palestinia­n issue — namely Iran — will no longer be able to capitalise on it.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has spoken more positively about the Saudi-led Arab peace initiative in the past few months, although he has said that it needs to undergo a number of changes.

For example, Israel is expected to oppose the demand to share Jerusalem with a future Palestinia­n state and relinquish the Golan Heights back to Syrian control. The Arab side is unlikely to agree to those changes in the foreseeabl­e future.

What the visit of the Saudi delegation does seem to prove is that the Palestinia­n issue is currently very low on the agenda of the Saudis and their other allies in the Arab world, including Egypt.

However, it is hard to see a more official and above-board relationsh­ip with Israel until at least some progress is made on the Palestinia­n front.

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