Miami Herald

Emiratis land in Israel, firming new ties and angering Palestinia­ns

- BY DAVID M. HALBFINGER AND ADAM RASGON The New York Times

JERUSALEM

Diplomats from the United Arab Emirates on Tuesday made their first official trip to Israel since the countries normalized relations in August, and the two sides signed pacts deepening their ties, including allowing their citizens to travel from one country to the other without visas — Israel’s first such waiver with an Arab state.

Confined to the BenGurion Airport tarmac as a coronaviru­s-related precaution, Prime Minister Benjaecono­mic min Netanyahu of Israel and Obaid Hamaid Al Tayer, the UAE’s minister of state for financial affairs — along with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin of the United States, which brokered the new diplomatic relationsh­ip — marked the milestone under a temporary canopy, with an Etihad Boeing 787 Dreamliner providing the backdrop.

“Today we are making history,” Netanyahu said, assuring his guests that “the enthusiasm for this peace agreement among our peoples is enormous, it’s real, it’s broad, it’s deep.”

“These ties create a tremendous foundation for

growth, opportunit­y, innovation and prosperity,” Mnuchin added.

But some aspects of the bilateral pacts announced Tuesday further antagonize­d the Palestinia­ns, who were enraged by the Emiratis’ decision to bring their below-the-radar cooperatio­n with Israel into the open with formal diplomatic relations. The Palestinia­ns had long counted on Arab solidarity to deny Israel such normalizat­ion until they had achieved statehood.

Tuesday’s visa-waiver agreement, in particular, frustrated Palestinia­ns who pointed out that Israel would now let Emiratis visit Israel and Jerusalem with ease, while still forcing residents of the West Bank and Gaza Strip to submit to an often insurmount­able permitting process, including extensive security checks, before gaining access to Muslim holy sites. such as the Aqsa mosque compound.

“I need a permit issued by the Israeli military to visit Jerusalem,” Salem Barameh, who leads the Palestinia­n Institute for Public Diplomacy, wrote on Twitter. “The city I was born in. But now an Emirati can go visa-free because two warmongeri­ng, human rights abusing regimes made a deal together for weapons. Does this sound just to you?”

Trump administra­tion officials also announced that the government­s of the United States, the UAE and Israel will create a $3 billion investment fund, to be called the Abraham Fund, which would seek to promote private investment in Israel, the West Bank, and elsewhere in the Middle

East and North Africa.

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