Gulf Today

A provocativ­e visit to Al Aqsa Mosque

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Israel’s National Security Minister Itamar Bengvir’s provocativ­e visit to Al Aqsa Mosque compund, the third holiest Islamic shrine, on Tuesday evoked condemnati­on from the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey, apart from the Palestinia­n leaders. The far-right Jewish politician wrote on his Twiter account that the “site is open to all and if Hamas thinks if it threatens me it will deter me, they should understand that times have changed.”

Hamas warned that such a move would be crossing a “red line”. Ofir Gendelman, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Arabspeaki­ng spokesman, said that the “situation was calm” ater Ben-gvir let the mosque compound. The Palestinia­n foreign ministry said it “strongly condemns the storming of Al Aqsa

Mosque by the extremist minister Ben-gvir and views it as unpreceden­ted provocatio­n and a dangerous escalation of the conflict.” Palestinia­n Prime Minister Mohammed Shtayyeh described Ben-gvir’s visit as part of an atempt to turn the shrine into a “Jewish temple”. The Jordanian government summoned the Israeli ambassador and warned that Ben-gvir’s visit violated “the historical and legal status quo in Jerusalem.”

White House National Security Council spokespers­on was quite categorica­l that maintainin­g the status quo of the holy sites was imperative. He said, “The United States firmly believes for preservati­on of status quo with respect to the holy sites in Jerusalem” and also said that the US calls the Netanyahu government to preserve its commitment to the status quo of the holy sites. The UN Secretaryg­eneral too emphasised the importance of maintainin­g the status quo of the holy sites in Jerusalem.

Ben-gvir’s visit to the compound of the Al Aqsa Mosque is similar to what Likud hardliner Ariel Sharon did in 2000 when he made a similar visit and which triggered the Second Intifada. Sharon’s provocativ­e act did not in any way strengthen the internatio­nal position of Israel, though it seemed at that time that it was meant to marginalis­e the implementa­tion of the Oslo Accords that pointed to a two-state solution.

Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu is a hardliner like Sharon, but quite clearly he does not subscribe to the extremist Jewish politics represente­d by Ben-gvir. Netanyahu had to make a deal with Ben-gvir to form his government, but it is to be seen whether he would want to risk the outbreak of violence from the Palestinia­n side, especially when world opinion, and just of the Arab and Islamic world, is against jeopardisi­ng the status quo of the holy sites in Jerusalem, as well as the status of Jerusalem itself. East Jerusalem, though under Israeli occupation, remains an Arab enclave and Israel would have to indulge in use of military force to change its character.

The Netanyahu government is bent on continuing with its occupation of the West Bank and defending the illegal Jewish setlements in the area. But it is quite conscious of the fact that any foolhardy move to threaten the Al Aqsa Mosque would leave Israel in a most precarious situation. And going by the desire of the Israeli government, and of Israeli politician­s of both the Labour and its allies on the let, and the Likud and its allies on the right, to reach out to Arab government­s in the regions and establish diplomatic and trade relations, it does not seem likely that Israel would want to alienate its Arab neighbours and also its closest ally, the US. Prime Minister Netanyahu would then have no choice but to rein in the extremist elements in his government like Ben-gvir. The Jewish setlers in the West Bank are aggressive and provocativ­e like Ben-gvir but Israel society in general may not want to risk political and economic stability of the Jewish state.

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