The Jerusalem Post

What Abbas should be concerned about

- • By ELIE PODEH (Reuters) The author is a board member at Mitvim – The Israeli Institute for Regional Foreign Policies and teaches Middle Eastern Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

On July 2, Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas delivered a speech at the African Union Heads of State Summit in Addis Ababa. The speech attracted little attention from Israeli or global media, for in many ways it was similar to Abbas’s many speeches focusing on the Israeli occupation and its consequenc­es. It did, however, include an interestin­g section in which the Palestinia­n president called on the African leaders (many of whom are Muslim or Arab) to stipulate that any upgrade of their ties with Israel would be conditiona­l on Israel ending the occupation.

Given that most experts concur that Arab countries, especially Saudi Arabia, will not take unnecessar­y diplomatic risks or normalize ties with Israel before the resolution of the Palestinia­n issue, we should ask ourselves what Abbas is concerned about.

First, Abbas, who has been heavily involved in shaping Palestinia­n history, knows that at critical moments, the Arab countries have followed their own separate interests. In 1979, it was Egypt under Sadat that turned its back on the Palestinia­ns and signed a peace agreement with Israel. In 1982, during the First Lebanon War, there were no Arab efforts to save the PLO from Israel. The organizati­on suffered defeat and was forced to relocate its headquarte­rs to Tunisia. In 1988, Jordan unilateral­ly disengaged from the West Bank, following the first intifada. Later, Yasser Arafat abandoned king Hussein by signing the Oslo Accords in 1993, despite the latter’s political umbrella during the 1991 Madrid conference. King Hussein felt betrayed, but decided to make use of the positive regional momentum to sign a peace treaty with Yitzhak Rabin in 1994, without stipulatin­g that the implementa­tion of the Israeli-Palestinia­n agreement or the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state were conditions of the agreement.

Abbas’ second concern is the absence of natural, consistent­ly reliable allies, which is especially disconcert­ing in view of the PA’s inherent weakness and limited economic resources, and its resulting dependence on regional actors (including Israel). In the past, the PLO could automatica­lly count on the support of the Soviet Union, Syria, Iraq, Libya and Yemen. Today, all these actors have become irrelevant for the PA and its current strategy of relying on moderate states that support the peace process. Such states, however, are not always aligned with the interests of the PA. In 2017, for example, Egypt attempted to amend the Arab Peace Initiative (an attempt blocked by Palestinia­n objection) and is currently promoting a deal with Hamas to grant Mohammad Dahlan powers in Gaza, contrary to the wishes and at the expense of the interests of the PA.

Finally, Abbas is concerned by recent changes in Israel’s favor in the overall Arab position. In 2013, the Arab Quartet agreed to modify the Arab Peace Initiative and accept the notion of Israeli-Palestinia­n land swaps without demanding any concession from Israel in return. Moreover, Saudi Arabia has made a series of gestures to Israel over the past two years, including visits, meetings, and allusions to secret security cooperatio­n against common enemies. In May 2017, The Wall Street Journal even reported that Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states offered to take some normalizat­ion steps toward Israel in return for a limited settlement­s freeze and an Israeli decision to ease restrictio­ns over trade with Gaza.

Over the years, various Arab countries have conducted behind-thescenes relations with Israel. The Arab countries were afraid of being caught in public as supporting their Israeli “mistress” rather than their Palestinia­n “wife.” This “mistress syndrome” is still evident, but recent developmen­ts indicate that the interests of these countries, and specifical­ly their desire to deter Iran and its allies, are served by publicizin­g their diplomatic or security ties with Israel. Making their relations with Israel more public also lays the groundwork for a future upgrade of ties with Israel, once the Israeli-Palestinia­n peace process moves forward.

Like other experts, I also believed (and continue to believe) that Saudi Arabia, the Gulf states and other Arab countries will not take major steps toward normalizat­ion with Israel before significan­t progress is made toward a resolution of the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict. Nonetheles­s, an uncompromi­sing Palestinia­n position, and the continued split between the PA and Hamas, might lead Arab leaders to prefer their national interests over their commitment to the Palestinia­n cause. Sadat and king Hussein made such decisions in the past, and others may follow. This is a definite cause of concern for Abbas.

 ??  ?? ON THE mind of Mahmoud Abbas. ‘Over the years, various Arab countries have conducted behind-the-scenes relations with Israel.’
ON THE mind of Mahmoud Abbas. ‘Over the years, various Arab countries have conducted behind-the-scenes relations with Israel.’

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