The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

ARABIA & PERSIA MATTER

There remains room for peace in West Asia, despite Iran-israel clashes. India should put its weight behind two-state solution

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THE DIRECT STRIKES and counter strikes over the last few days between Israel and Iran may have just done enough to signal political resolve and demonstrat­e the military capability to attack each other while carefully avoiding the escalation of the conflict — bilateral as well as regional across the Middle East. Both sides took enough precaution­s to avoid major civilian targets, and communicat­ion through various channels may have given enough early warning for effective defences against the strikes. Israel's prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, might have liked to escalate the war with Iran and draw the US into the firefight against Tehran. But the Biden Administra­tion's refusal to support that plan and Washington's pressure to avoid retaliatio­n against Iran's attack did not stop Tel Aviv but appear to have tempered the nature of the Israeli response. Iran, comfortabl­e in its proxy war against Israel, has no desire to be drawn into a costly confrontat­ion with the US with unpredicta­ble political consequenc­es. A wider conflagrat­ion in the Middle East has been staved off, at least for now.

The military duel between Israel and Iran has drawn attention to a dynamic in the region that the Indian public debate barely pays attention to — the intensity of the contradict­ions between Iran and the Sunni Arab states. The willingnes­s of the moderate Arab leaders to help Israel defend itself against Iranian attack — explicitly by Jordan and less so by others — underlines the convergenc­e of Israeli and Arab interests in countering Iran's brazen destabilis­ation of the region through its various proxies like the Hamas. It was this shared regional interest that produced the Washington-brokered Abraham Accords in 2020, which sought to promote reconcilia­tion between Israel and the moderate Arab regimes. It is noteworthy that the Abraham Accords have survived the horrendous Israeli military campaign in Gaza that has taken at least 30,000 lives.

India, which has supported the Abraham Accords, does not want to be drawn into the conflict between Gulf Arabs and Iran. This is not surprising given the high stakes it has in the relations with both sides. After all, both Arabia and Persia matter for peace and prosperity in the Subcontine­nt. That does not mean India should remain a passive bystander in the Middle East. Instead, it should put its full diplomatic weight behind the Arab plans for a two-state solution in Palestine that could find a way between Tehran’s cynical hijacking of the issue and Tel Aviv's equally cynical refusal to abide by the promises it has made on Palestinia­n statehood. The Arab initiative involves several elements — an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the insertion of an Arab peace force, an Israeli commitment to an irreversib­le roadmap for a Palestinia­n state, the mobilisati­on of Arab resources for the reconstruc­tion of Gaza and the West Bank, and US security guarantees for the Gulf. To be sure, the Middle East is littered with failed initiative­s, but the current crises in the region may have opened some wiggle room for thinking boldly about peace. For India, the stakes in the Arab-israeli peace today are higher than ever before.

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