Kuwait Times

Saudis visit Israel, meet govt official

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JERUSALEM: The head of a rare Saudi delegation to Israel and the occupied West Bank met a senior Israeli government official during his trip, Israel’s foreign ministry told AFP yesterday. Foreign Ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon said the meeting between retired Saudi general Anwar Eshki and ministry Director General Dore Gold took place at the prestigiou­s King David hotel in west Jerusalem but did not give further details.

The Jerusalem Post newspaper said Eshki led a delegation of “businessme­n and academics” on a mission to promote a stalled Saudi-led 2002 Arab peace initiative. It said that he met Major General Yoav Mordechai, head of the military body that coordinate­s Israeli activities in the West Bank and Gaza, and talked Friday in the West Bank to a group of Israeli opposition MPs.

Israel and Saudi Arabia have never had diplomatic relations but there have been media reports of intelligen­ce-sharing in the face of shared concerns about Iran and the Islamic State group. Eshki and Gold shared a platform in June last year at the Washington headquarte­rs of the Council on Foreign Relations and “met to discuss opportunit­ies and challenges in the Middle East,” the council said on its website at the time. “Their speeches focused on the danger Iran posed to their countries, and they revealed that they had been in secret discussion­s for a year, and had

now decided to go public about their talks,” it added. Israeli army radio on Sunday aired an Arabic telephone interview with Eshki, chairman of the Jeddah-based Middle East Centre for Strategic and Legal Studies, in which he denied that his country had security links with the Jewish state. “To my knowledge there is no cooperatio­n in the struggle against terrorism,” he said. He said that Israel would only be able to make peace with the Arab world when it had resolved the conflict with the Palestinia­ns, in accordance with the 2002 Arab proposal.

It calls for Israel to withdraw from the occupied territorie­s and resolve the issue of refugees with the Palestinia­ns, leading to the creation of a Palestinia­n state, in exchange for normalized relations with Arab countries. “Peace will not come from Arab countries, but the Palestinia­ns and the implementa­tion of the Arab peace plan,” Eshki said. The radio quoted him as saying the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict “is not the cause of terrorism, but it provides a breeding ground for conflict in the region”. Egypt and Jordan are the only two Arab nations to have made peace with Israel. — AFP

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