Fears of Iran aired as envoys meet
Israel’s Arab allies press for creation of Palestinian state
SDE BOKER, Israel — At a summit Monday, the top diplomats of Israel, the United States and four Arab countries discussed how to coordinate against Iran, Washington’s engagement in the region and the need to maintain calm when overlapping holidays could raise tensions between Israelis and Palestinians.
Several of the Arab participants also publicly pressed Israel on the need to create a sovereign Palestinian state. They appeared united in their shared fears of Iran and its proxies at a news briefing at the summit’s conclusion.
“What we are doing here is making history — building a new regional architecture based on progress, technology, religious tolerance, security and intelligence cooperation,” said the Israeli foreign minister, Yair Lapid, who organized the conference.
“This new architecture and shared capabilities we are building,” Lapid added, “intimidates and deters our common enemies — first and foremost Iran and its proxies.”
The historic summit was the first Arab-Israeli diplomatic meeting on Israeli soil, and several of the attendees did not hide their enthusiasm.
“This is our first time” in Israel, Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the Emirati foreign minister, said in his closing statement. “If we are curious sometimes, and we want to know things and learn, it’s because although Israel has been part of this region for a very long time, we’ve not known each other. So it’s time to catch up.”
In that spirit, the participants confirmed that they would try to meet in a different country every year — and that they hoped to welcome more countries to the gatherings in the future.
The summit brought together Lapid with the foreign ministers of Bahrain, Egypt, Morocco and the United Arab Emirates, along with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken. It reflected how Israel has cemented its partnerships with parts of the Arab world.
Bahrain, Morocco and the United Arab Emirates all normalized diplomatic ties with Israel in 2020, while Egypt was the first Arab state to sign a peace treaty with Israel, in 1979.
A terrorist attack that killed two people Sunday night in northern Israel, just as the ministers were gathering in the south, was a reminder of how Israel’s acceptance by some Arab states has done little to resolve its conflict with Palestinians.
The summit took place in Sde Boker, a small desert town in southern Israel.
The meetings provided a forum to discuss disagreements and shared concerns about the war in Ukraine and gave Blinken a chance to encourage Washington’s Middle Eastern allies to align with efforts to isolate Russia.
Although the United States helped Israel broker the deals with Bahrain, Morocco and the United Arab Emirates, the summit was an indication that Israel could now itself act as a public conduit between Washington and some Arab countries.
By hosting, Israel brought together Blinken and his Emirati counterpart at a time of friction over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The United Arab Emirates has so far dodged U.S. demands to increase its oil production to help American allies find alternatives to Russian gas.
The foreign ministers met as U.S.-backed efforts to secure a new nuclear deal with Iran reach a climax. The meeting gave participants the chance to express concerns to Blinken about aspects of the proposed deal that they deem too lenient.
It also gave the Emirates and Bahrain an opportunity to encourage a distracted Washington to play a more active role in the region — a demand that they consider particularly urgent after recent attacks on Emirati and Saudi infrastructure by an Iranian-backed militia in Yemen that is fighting Saudi-led forces.
Small groups of protesters, standing on a hill opposite the hotel where the summit was held Monday morning, attempted to draw attention to the Palestinians. One group held both a Palestinian and an Israeli flag.
Another held a banner that said: “Isn’t someone missing?”