Miami Herald

After halting West Bank plan, Israel establishe­s full ties to UAE

- BY JOSEF FEDERMAN, MATTHEW LEE AND JON GAMBRELL Associated Press

JERUSALEM

Israel and the United Arab Emirates announced Thursday they are establishi­ng full diplomatic relations in a U.S.-brokered deal that required Israel to halt its contentiou­s plan to annex occupied West Bank land sought by the Palestinia­ns.

The historic deal delivered a key foreign-policy victory to President Donald Trump as he seeks re-election and reflected a changing Middle East in which shared concerns about archenemy Iran have largely overtaken traditiona­l Arab support for the Palestinia­ns.

A spokesman for Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas said the deal amounts to “treason,” and should be reversed.

The agreement makes the UAE the third Arab country, after Egypt and Jordan, to have full diplomatic ties with Israel. They announced it in a joint statement, saying deals between Israel and the UAE were expected in the coming weeks in such areas as tourism, direct flights and embassies.

Trump called the deal “a truly historic moment.”

“Now that the ice has been broken I expect more Arab and Muslim countries will follow the United Arab Emirates,” he told reporters in the Oval Office.

In a nationally televised news conference, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu echoed Trump’s remarks. “Today we usher in a new era of peace between Israel and the Arab world,” he said. “There is a good chance we will soon see more

The U.S.-brokered deal requires Israel to halt its contentiou­s plan to annex occupied West Bank land sought by the Palestinia­ns.

Arab countries joining this expanding circle of peace.”

But Netanyahu said the annexation plan was on “temporary hold,” appearing to contradict statements from Emirati officials who said it was off the table.

Emirati officials described the deal in pragmatic terms. Anwar Gargash, a top Emirati official, said they had dealt a “death blow” to an aggressive Israeli move and hoped to help reshape the region. “Is it perfect? Nothing is perfect in a very difficult region,” Gargash added. “But I think we used our political chips right.”

Omar Ghobash, assistant minister for culture and public diplomacy, told The Associated Press: “I don’t think anything was written in stone. We are opening a door. We are hoping the Israelis will see the benefits to this step.”

“I would assume that this is political maneuverin­g within a very complex political society,” he added.

Israel and the UAE do not share a border and have never fought a war. But the UAE, like most of the Arab world, long rejected diplomatic ties with Israel in the absence of a peace deal establishi­ng a Palestinia­n state on lands captured by Israel in 1967.

That steadfast support for the Palestinia­ns, however, has begun to weaken in recent years, in large part because of the shared enmity toward Iran and Iranian proxies in the region. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the dayto-day ruler of the UAE, also shares Israel’s distrust of Islamist groups like the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and the Gaza Strip’s ruling Hamas militant group.

Netanyahu has long boasted about fostering closer behind-the-scenes ties with Arab countries than publicly acknowledg­ed. The UAE has made little secret of those budding ties, allowing Israeli businessme­n to enter the country on foreign passports and welcoming Israeli officials and sporting figures. Next year, Israel will take part in the UAE’s delayed Expo 2020, the world’s fair being hosted by Dubai. A secret synagogue also draws Jews in Dubai.

Still, the timing of the deal was unexpected, and perhaps tied to the upcoming U.S. election.

For Trump, it gave an important boost to a president trailing in opinion polls and facing heavy criticism for his handling of the coronaviru­s crisis. It was also a rare achievemen­t for his Mideast team, led by adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner, whose Mideast plan has made little headway since it was unveiled early this year.

Israel and the UAE are among Trump’s few close internatio­nal allies, and Thursday’s deal may have been seen as an election gift.

U.S.-Israeli author Joel Rosenberg, who met with the crown prince in 2018 alongside fellow evangelica­l

Christians, said the announceme­nt could influence religious voters who may “struggle to decide” between Trump and presumptiv­e Democratic nominee Joe Biden. Thursday’s agreement offers “a feel that this is historic” and a change for Trump to “have a series of big moments in the months ahead.”

In a statement, Biden praised Israel for freezing the annexation plan.

“The United Arab Emirates and Israel have pointed a path toward a more peaceful, stable Middle East,” he said, adding that a Biden presidency “will seek to build on this progress.”

Netanyahu chalked up a diplomatic victory at a time when his shaky coalition government has been plagued by infighting and faces the possibilit­y of early elections. He also faces a corruption trial over charges stemming from a series of scandals.

But even his rivals praised the deal.

Netanyahu has seen his popularity plummet as the country grapples with a renewed coronaviru­s outbreak, mass street protests and skyrocketi­ng unemployme­nt as the result of earlier lockdown measures.

For the UAE, home to skyscraper-studded Dubai and the rolling, oil-rich sand dunes of Abu Dhabi, it further burnishes its internatio­nal campaign to be seen as a beacon of tolerance in the Middle East despite being governed by autocratic rulers. It also removes the stigma of recognizin­g Israel and could open the door for neighborin­g countries to follow suit.

The Gulf state of Bahrain welcomed the deal.

All in all, Netanyahu paid a relatively minor price. Although the hoped-for annexation plan is on hold, a half-century status quo remains in place in which Israel maintains its occupation of the West Bank and continues to expand its scores of settlement­s while Palestinia­ns live in small autonomous enclaves.

Those settlement­s are now home to some 500,000 Israelis.

The Palestinia­ns claim all of the West Bank, captured in the 1967 Mideast war, as the heartland of a future state. The Trump Mideast plan envisions granting Israel permanent control over 30% of that territory, while offering the Palestinia­ns limited autonomy in the rest. After embracing the plan, Netanyahu backed away from moving forward with annexation last month in the face of fierce internatio­nal opposition and misgivings by White House officials.

The Palestinia­ns have rejected Trump’s Mideast plan out of hand. Abbas, the president of the Palestinia­n Authority, convened a meeting of his top leadership Thursday night, and afterward his spokesman Nabil Abu Rdeneh, said the agreement amounted to “treason.” He added that the UAE must reverse the decision and urged other Arab countries not to follow suit “at the expense of Palestinia­n rights.”

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