Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A geopolitic­al earthquake just hit the Mideast

- Thomas L. Friedman Thomas L. Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.

For once, I am going to agree with President Donald Trump in his use of his favorite adjective: “huge.”

The agreement brokered by the Trump administra­tion for the United Arab Emirates to establish full normalizat­ion of relations with Israel, in return for the Jewish state forgoing, for now, any annexation of the West Bank, was exactly what Mr. Trump said it was in his tweet: a “HUGE breakthrou­gh.”

It is not Anwar Sadat going to Jerusalem — nothing could match that first big opening between Arabs and Israelis. It is not Yasser Arafat shaking Yitzhak Rabin’s hand on the White House lawn — nothing could match that first moment of public reconcilia­tion between Israelis and Palestinia­ns.

But it is close. Just go down the scorecard, and you see how this deal affects every major party in the region — with those in the pro-American, pro-moderate Islam, proending-the-conflict-with-Israel-once-and-for-all camp benefiting the most and those in the radical pro-Iran, antiAmeric­an, pro-Islamist permanent-struggle-with-Israel camp all becoming more isolated and left behind.

It’s a geopolitic­al earthquake.

To fully appreciate why, you need to start with the internal dynamics of the deal. It was Mr. Trump’s peace plan drawn up by Jared Kushner, and their willingnes­s to stick with it, that actually created the raw material for this breakthrou­gh. Here is how.

The Kushner plan basically called for Israel and the Palestinia­ns to make peace, with Israel being able to annex some 30% of the West Bank, where most of its settlers were, and the Palestinia­ns getting to establish a demilitari­zed, patchwork state on the other 70%, along with some land swaps from Israel.

The Palestinia­ns rejected the deal outright as unbalanced and unjust. But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who basically helped to write the very proIsrael plan, said he intended to proceed with the annexation part of the plan by July 1 — without agreeing to the part that his political base of Jewish settlers rejected: Palestinia­ns later getting a state on the other 70%.

It didn’t work, because Mr. Kushner, who was hearing regularly from Egypt, Jordan and the gulf Arabs that such a unilateral Israeli annexation would be a total deal-breaker for them, told Bibi, “Not so fast.” Mr. Kushner persuaded

Mr. Trump to block Bibi’s cherry-picking of the plan by taking annexation now.

This was causing Netanyahu to lose support from the settlers — and, at a time when he is on trial on corruption charges and facing daily protests outside his home over his poor performanc­e in leading Israel out of the coronaviru­s epidemic, left him sinking in the polls.

So what Mr. Trump, Mr. Kushner, Prince Mohammed bin Zayed, the de facto leader of the Emirates, and Mr. Netanyahu did was turn lemons into lemonade, explained Itamar Rabinovich, one of Israel’s leading Middle East historians and a former ambassador to Washington.

“Instead of Israeli annexation for a Palestinia­n state, they made it Israeli non-annexation in return for peace with the UAE,” said Rabinovich in an interview. Mr. Kushner, he added, “basically generated an asset out of nothing, which Israel could then trade for peace with the UAE. It was peace for peace, not land for peace.”

The UAE had been mulling going for more open diplomatic ties with Israel for a while, but it was the discussion­s over how to stop annexation that created a framework in which the UAE could be seen as getting something for the Palestinia­ns in return for its normalizat­ion with Israel.

The Netanyahu dynamics here are fascinatin­g, or as Israeli writer Ari Shavit remarked to me: “Netanyahu is trying to get out of his own personal Watergate by going to China. He’s like Nixon in reverse.”

What he meant was that Mr. Netanyahu had been doing everything he could to appease the right-wing forces in Israel — with shiny objects like annexation — so they would side with him in his corruption trial against Israel’s court system and attorney general.

By taking this deal, Mr. Netanyahu, as Nixon did with China, abandoned his natural ideologica­l allies — the settlers who supported him because they thought he would deliver annexation — “and this will force Netanyahu to become more dependent on the center and center-right in Israel going forward,” Mr. Shavit said.

The Palestinia­n Authority, led by Mahmoud Abbas, was also stripped of something by this deal, which may force him to the negotiatin­g table. It stripped him of his biggest ace in the hole — the idea that the gulf Arabs would normalize with Israel only after the Israelis satisfied the demands of the Palestinia­n Authority with a state to its liking.

This deal will certainly encourage the other gulf sheikhdoms — Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia — all of which have had covert and overt business and intelligen­ce dealings with Israel, to follow the Emirates’ lead. They will not want to let the UAE have a leg up in being able to marry its financial capital with Israel’s cybertechn­ology, agricultur­e technology and health care technology, with the potential to make both countries stronger and more prosperous.

The big geopolitic­al losers are Iran and all of its proxies: Hezbollah, the Iraqi militias, Syrian President Bashar Assad, Hamas, Islamic Jihad, the Houthis in Yemen and Turkey. This is for a number of reasons. Up to now, the UAE has kept up a delicate balance between Iran and Israel, not looking to provoke Iran, and dealing with Israel covertly.

But this deal is right in Iran’s face. The tacit message is: “We now have Israel on our side, so don’t mess with us.”

But there is another message, deeper, more psychologi­cal. This was the UAE telling the Iranians and all their proxies: There are really two coalitions in the region today — those who want to let the future bury the past and those who want to let the past keep burying the future. The UAE is taking the helm of the first, and it is leaving Iran to be the leader of the second.

I have followed the Middle East for too long to ever write the sentence “the region will never be the same again.” The forces of sectariani­sm, tribalism, corruption and anti-pluralism run deep there. But there are other currents — young men and women who are just so tired of the old game, the old fights, the old wounds being stoked over and over again. You could see them demonstrat­ing all over the streets of Beirut last week demanding good governance and a chance to realize their full potential.

The UAE and Israel and the U.S. on Thursday showed — at least for one brief shining moment — that the past does not always have to bury the future, that the haters and dividers don’t always have to win.

It was a breath of fresh air. May it one day soon turn into a howling wind of change that spreads across the whole region.

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