The Sentinel-Record

Bahrain-Israel agreement building block to stability

- David Ignatius

With Bahrain’s announceme­nt Friday that it will join the United Arab Emirates in establishi­ng diplomatic relations with Israel, the dominoes are falling in the Middle East in the right direction for a change.

Bahrain’s decision to join the Emiratis is a second solid gain for the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to bridge the gap between Israel and Arab states. Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and senior adviser on the Middle East, said in an interview that the move shows that “a lot of the leaders in the region are tired of waiting for the Palestinia­ns” before recognizin­g the reality of Israel.

The significan­ce of Bahrain’s action is partly that it wouldn’t have happened without the blessing of Saudi Arabia, which is joined by a causeway to the small Persian Gulf state. The Saudis have historical­ly exercised what amounts to a veto over Bahraini policy. In this case, the Saudis silently endorsed their tiny neighbor’s decision, rather than vetoing it.

Kushner believes that the

Saudis are waiting to see how the normalizat­ion process plays out before taking the move themselves. He thinks an eventual

Saudi normalizat­ion is inevitable, if not imminent. The Saudis gave tacit approval of the Emirati decision last month by publicly announcing they would allow commercial jets traveling between Israel and the U.A.E. to fly over Saudi territory.

President Trump will have a prized photo opportunit­y next week when he hosts Bahraini, Emirati and Israeli leaders at a White House ceremony to celebrate the agreements. This shouldn’t be confused with a Palestinia­n-Israeli peace agreement — which looks as far away today as ever — but it’s still a significan­t achievemen­t.

Kushner noted the symbolism that the Bahrain agreement was announced on the 19th anniversar­y of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks: “On 9/11, there is no stronger counter to extremism than bringing countries together for tolerance and peace.” That statement makes a good political sound bite in this election year, but it’s also true.

Bahrain took a first step toward Friday’s announceme­nt when it hosted a meeting in June 2019 between Israeli and Arab leaders to discuss economic aspects of Kushner’s thus-far stalled plan for the Palestinia­ns. Because of this earlier public engagement with Israel, Bahrain was seen as a likely next country to follow the U.A.E.

The administra­tion is courting other Arab states to join the process. Brian Hook, the State Department official who has worked closely with Kushner on the normalizat­ion process, said the discussion­s are shaped by the fact that a younger generation of leaders — such as Bahrain’s Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa — is taking power in the Arab world.

Sudan appears to be close: Lt. Gen. Abdel Fattah Abdelrahma­n Burhan, the head of the ruling military council that replaced Omar al-Bashir, is said to support an agreement with Israel now, but Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok and other political factions apparently aren’t convinced.

In Oman, Sultan Haitham bin Tariq, who took the throne in January, has publicly supported the UAE-Israel deal and rebuffed Palestinia­n attempts to condemn the Emiratis. Although Haitham is still gaining his footing, his country has already hosted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, which makes an eventual move toward full normalizat­ion easier.

Morocco, which has a large Jewish population and for decades has maintained secret contacts with Israel, is another likely prospect. But the process is complicate­d by Morocco’s desire that the United States recognize its controvers­ial claims of sovereignt­y in the contested western Sahara region.

The dilemma for the Palestinia­ns — whose suffering is largely ignored amid the celebratio­ns of diplomatic progress — is how to influence a process that is accelerati­ng despite their bitter opposition. Palestinia­n leader Mahmoud Abbas failed to win Arab League endorsemen­t this week for a resolution condemning the U.A.E. normalizat­ion decision. That was another sign that Palestinia­ns have lost their veto power over Arab decisions on Israel.

The decision by two wealthy Gulf countries to recognize Israel doesn’t help the shattered nations of the Middle East, such as Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Libya. And it doesn’t represent Middle East peace, whatever may be said at the White House next week. But for a region that sometimes seems to be in slow-motion collapse, it’s a building block for a better future.

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