The Daily News Egypt

A strengthen­ed alliance

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Leaving behind his mounting legal problems, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu flew to Washington last Saturday to attend the annual policy conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), the powerful pro-Israeli lobby in the United States. On his five-day visit, Netanyahu met with President Donald Trump and congressio­nal leaders.

TheWhite House meeting with the American president is the second for Netanyahu. Last year, less than two months after President Trump was sworn in, the Israeli prime minister was the first Middle Eastern leader to meet with the American president.The second visit was described by an American official as “a routine check-in meeting.” Notwithsta­nding this characteri­sation, the visit demonstrat­es the ever-growing alliance between the United States and Israel.

American-Israeli relations have grown by leaps and bounds in the course of last year.The Trump administra­tion, even though it had promised the Arabs and the Palestinia­ns an elusive “deal of the century” from day one in office, it has adopted unpreceden­ted pro-Israeli positions, even by American standards.

Unlike previous American administra­tions, the present administra­tion has recognised Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, and the American embassy will be relocated to that city.When President Trump announced this decision, much to the consternat­ion of the world, the American Secretary of State, Rex Tillerson had said that the move would not take place before two to three years. However, last February, the State Department took everyone by surprise by announcing that the United States decided to move its diplomatic mission to Jerusalem next May to coincide with the 70th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of the State of Israel.

In the meantime, these decisions have not been accompanie­d by measures to help the Palestinia­n cause and convey a certain resemblanc­e of balance in American attitudes towards the Palestinia­ns and the Israelis. In the early days of the Trump administra­tion, American officials had stressed that they would come up with the “deal of the century” before year’s end.To the dismay of the Palestinia­ns and the Arabs, the administra­tion announced in the last quarter of 2017 that it would postpone its peace proposals to the first three months of 2018. Lately, one administra­tion official pointed out that the American government “will release the plan when it is done and the time is right.” In the meantime, the Trump administra­tion cut off some of its financial assistance to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) that is responsibl­e for the welfare of Palestinia­n refugees living in camps in Syria, Jordan, and Lebanon. Furthermor­e, Washington also reduced its financial aid to the Palestinia­n Authority, in an apparent bid to coerce the authority to go along with the American peace plan, when offered.

The Netanyahu s visit to Washington this time was not geared towards peace with the Palestinia­ns,but rather, the overall geopolitic­al situation in the Middle East, and, particular­ly, the growing influence of Iran in Syria, and its presumed permanent presence in Syria when the guns will grow silent.

Netanyahu has made Iran and the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the nuclear deal of July 2015 among the Group of 5+1(the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany) and Iran his main security agenda,portraying Tehran as a regional hegemon out to destroy Israel, and control the whole Middle East. He even has asserted, on many occasions, that his country has what he calls “Sunni allies” among the Arab states, ready to work with the United States and Israel, to confront and contain Iran and its regional proxies.

The American policies towards Iran have become completely aligned with that of Netanyahu. Expectedly, the senior American officials who are scheduled to speak at the annual policy conference of AIPAC—Vice President Mike Pence and Ambassador Nikki Haley, the permanent representa­tive of the United States to the United Nations in NewYork— are going to identify with the Israeli positions concerning Iran, and stress, one more time, the iron-clad commitment of the Trump administra­tion to defending Israel, and to push for a revision of the JCPOA to meet Israeli concerns in this respect.The administra­tion would coordinate with the Israelis to approach more energetica­lly the European Union to form a common front against Iran through an overhaul of the nuclear deal.

From an Egyptian, Palestinia­n, and Arab point of view, the second visit of Netanyahu to theWhite House will not make much of a difference.On the contrary,it could herald more insecurity and instabilit­y in the Middle East, and military confrontat­ion across the region.

Hussein Haridy

is former assistant to the foreign minister

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HUSSEIN HARIDY

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