Daily Press

Biden to push Mideast security ties

Upcoming trip set to focus on Arab and Israeli coordinati­on

- By Ellen Knickmeyer and Josef Federman

WASHINGTON — Once-unthinkabl­e coordinati­on between Israeli and Arab militaries is in the spotlight as Joe Biden makes his first Middle East trip as president, heightenin­g debates over whether the U.S.-backed initiative between former enemies strengthen­s defenses against Iran or makes a regional war more likely.

Israeli-Arab security overtures have multiplied since the 2020 Abraham Accords negotiated under the Trump administra­tion normalized relations between Israel and four Arab League nations. They have grown further since the Pentagon switched coordinati­on with Israel from U.S. European Command to Central Command, or CENTCOM, last year. The move grouped Israel’s military with former Arab opponents, including Saudi Arabia and other nations that have yet to recognize Israel.

Encouragin­g Arab nations to strengthen security ties and overall relations with Israel is one of the aims of Biden’s travels to Israel and Saudi Arabia next week, National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said Thursday.

Already this year, Gulf Arab princes and other dignitarie­s watched from the deck of a warship as the U.S. launched training that had Israeli frogmen, sailors and defense technology splashing through the Red Sea in one of the increasing Israeli exercises alongside U.S. and Arab militaries.

An Israeli liaison officer is to be assigned to U.S. 5th Fleet headquarte­rs in Bahrain, a Gulf nation that recognized Israel only in 2020. Arab and Israeli

defense officials increasing­ly consult around the region, exploring areas for security coordinati­on and how to align the expertise, intelligen­ce and weapons to implement it.

Republican and Democratic lawmakers introduced legislatio­n in June that would direct the Pentagon to shape a joint air defense system for Israel and Arab nations against Iranian ballistic missiles and drones.

Kirby said this week that the U.S. is stressing coordinati­on of regional air defense systems as an early step in the alliance “so there really is effective coverage to deal with Iran.”

CENTCOM members also are working together on maritime security, an Israeli official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the still largely behind-the-scenes Arab and Israeli security consultati­ons. The idea is that CENTCOM can coordinate

among these nations and “realize that vision of having regional defense,” the Israeli official said.

Biden has defended his upcoming meeting with Saudi rulers he had once shunned because of human rights abuses by saying he is acting partly at Israel’s request.

The Arab-Israeli security coordinati­on is deepening frustratio­ns of Palestinia­ns, who already feel they were sold out by the Abraham Accords, which did nothing to end Israeli occupation.

American officials until now have given few details of the budding IsraeliAra­b cooperatio­n, mindful that Arab publics may oppose embracing a longtime enemy. The Pentagon declined a request for comment on this story. The Saudi embassy in Washington did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

For Arab and Israeli leaders, “the No. 1 motivator

is the common threat they both perceive from Iran and Iranian proxies,” said Daniel Shapiro, a former ambassador to Israel and an advocate of the emerging coalition between Israel and individual Arab nations.

Especially to the extent Saudi Arabia comes on board, the security ties under CENTCOM raise prospects of a “truly unified Sunni Arab coalition to stand with Israel” against Shiite-led Iran, Shapiro said.

Israel considers Iran its greatest enemy, citing its nuclear program, military activities and support for hostile militant groups.

Gulf Arab states allied to the U.S. long have been wary of Iran’s support of militias and proxies. While lacking American-made sophistica­ted weaponry, Iran has an unmatched arsenal of ballistic missiles, drones and other arms.

Promoting greater regional integratio­n with Israel’s modern military

could soothe Saudi and Emirati complaints that the U.S. is not doing enough to protect them from Iran. It potentiall­y accustoms Arab nations to working with Israel, despite Israel’s failure to reach the kind of political resolution with the Palestinia­ns that Arab nations long demanded as a condition for recognizin­g Israel.

The U.S. also hopes the coordinati­on will mean that regional actors will take more responsibi­lity for their own security, allowing the U.S. to ease its decadeslon­g safeguardi­ng of Arab oilfields and turn more attention to Russia and China.

And in the short term of U.S. elections, the effort helps the White House emphasize the security aspect of a potentiall­y humbling presidenti­al trip that’s intended partly to appeal to Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries for more oil, with no guarantee of success.

Opponents accuse Israel of exaggerati­ng the Iranian threat.

“They want to get recognitio­n from Arab states,” said Vali Nasr, an Iran and Middle East expert at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies, and a former adviser to the Obama administra­tion. “And Iran is their ticket to that.”

Nasr said the risks include igniting Middle East hostility by uniting and enabling the most hawkish enemies of Iran, including Israel and the United Arab Emirates, and by allowing the deep grievances underlying Israeli-Palestinia­n hostility to fester.

The coordinati­on “looks like the U.S. is handing off security to Israel in order to focus on Ukraine and China,” Nasr said. He said this could backfire by inflaming regional tensions that draw the United States back in.

Even stronger warnings came from now-Secretary of State Antony Blinken, in a 2017 article against President Donald Trump’s promotion of an “Arab NATO.” A Sunni Arab security alliance “could potentiall­y pull the United States into the sectarian struggle between Sunni and Shia,” Blinken wrote then.

The current initiative under CENTCOM is no Arab NATO, and instead promotes coordinati­on among Israel and Arab partners to counteract threats from Iran, a U.S. official said, speaking under condition of anonymity to discuss the security alliance.

An open working relationsh­ip with Saudi Arabia would be a big prize for Israel in its increasing regional integratio­n. Saudi Arabia has been most reticent publicly about any cooperatio­n with Israel.

Observers and advocates on all sides of the security partnershi­ps said they expect no big breakthrou­ghs during Biden’s trip.

 ?? SPC. 1ST CLASS MARK THOMAS MAHMOD/U.S. CENTRAL COMMAND ?? Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, right, crown prince and prime minister of Bahrain, looks on as Vice Adm. Brad Cooper, commander of U.S. Naval Forces Central Command, salutes in January.
SPC. 1ST CLASS MARK THOMAS MAHMOD/U.S. CENTRAL COMMAND Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, right, crown prince and prime minister of Bahrain, looks on as Vice Adm. Brad Cooper, commander of U.S. Naval Forces Central Command, salutes in January.

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