Los Angeles Times

A push to build on Israel-Arab agreement

Biden administra­tion hails normalizat­ion of ties while emphasizin­g U.S. commitment to Palestinia­n statehood.

- By Tracy Wilkinson

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion is attempting to build on landmark accords that normalized relations between Israel and a handful of Arab or Muslim nations, but without leaving out the Palestinia­ns, whose cause for statehood seems more distant than ever.

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken on Wednesday hosted talks in Washington with his counterpar­ts from Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Yair Lapid and Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al Nahyan, respective­ly.

“We believe strongly that Palestinia­ns and Israelis deserve to live safely, securely, with equal measures of freedom, prosperity and democracy, and we will continue our own efforts toward that end,” which in turn fosters creation of a Palestinia­n state, Blinken said in a news conference with Lapid and Abdullah.

The three diplomats also discussed Iran’s failure thus far to return to the internatio­nal nuclear deal from which the Trump administra­tion withdrew as other nations in the pact tried to keep it alive. Blinken said the “runway” for reviving the deal in a way that controls Iran’s enrichment of nuclear materials “is getting shorter and shorter.”

Lapid reiterated that if diplomacy fails with Iran, Israel is prepared with alternativ­es. Israel is believed to have carried out clandestin­e attacks on Iranian sites.

The agreement between Israel and the handful of Arab nations, known as the Abraham accords, was brokered a year ago during the Trump administra­tion in what the former president often claimed to be his greatest diplomatic achievemen­t. In addition to the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain signed the agreement, followed by Sudan and Morocco, although their participat­ion has been more limited.

Since the signing, Israel has been engaged in numerous business and tourism deals with the Emirates and Bahrain, while the U.S. agreed to sell F-35 stealth fighter jets to the Emiratis. An estimated 200,000 Israeli tourists visited the Emirates in the last year, the U.S. government says, and the two countries have exchanged ambassador­s.

Blinken hailed “transforma­tive partnershi­ps” that are allowing the three Middle Eastern countries to create and deepen diplomacy and developmen­t projects in areas such as water use, climate change and trade.

Current and former administra­tion officials insist other Arab and Muslim countries are ready to join, but there has been no such movement to date, especially from regional powers such as Saudi Arabia.

Although none of the signatorie­s to the Abraham accords were engaged in war with Israel, they had not formally recognized the country. It was a major step for them to grant diplomatic recognitio­n to Israel.

But left out in the cold were the Palestinia­ns.

Arab nations had long argued they would never develop ties with Israel as long as the question of Palestinia­n sovereignt­y remained unresolved. Arab signatorie­s to the Abraham accords insisted that by joining they were able to stave off plans by Israel to annex large parts of the West Bank, which the Palestinia­ns claim for a future state.

Yet, no progress — by the U.S. or regional powers — has been made on negotiatio­ns with the Palestinia­ns. Washington has not reopened the U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem, a de facto embassy for the Palestinia­ns, despite promises to do so.

The consulate was subsumed when President Trump moved the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv in 2018 to criticism from internatio­nal allies and outcry from the Palestinia­ns, who have shunned the embassy because it broke decades of U.S. neutrality on competing claims over Jerusalem. And the Biden administra­tion has not pushed back forcefully on expanding settlement­s.

The Abraham accords are “not a substitute for the two-state solution,” a senior State Department official said, “and we hope that normalizat­ion can be leveraged to advance progress on the Israeli-Palestine track.”

The official briefed reporters ahead of Wednesday’s meetings on condition of anonymity in keeping with government protocols.

“The Biden administra­tion started out with a clear commitment to the twostate solution,” the official added. “We continue on with that commitment and we seek to advance it as we can, when we can, as best we can.”

It is unclear what leverage the Biden administra­tion can apply to Israel, still the largest recipient of U.S. aid.

Lapid has been more receptive to Palestinia­n rights, but the new prime minister of Israel, Naftali Bennett, has said he opposes an independen­t Palestinia­n state.

“Our goal is to work with the Palestinia­n Authority to ensure that every child has that opportunit­y” to have “a decent way of life,” Lapid said in the news conference with Blinken.

Abdullah said he hoped the Palestinia­ns and Israelis would see that regional cooperatio­n is “the path,” because it brings stability, peace and economic prosperity.

Some Mideast experts have suggested the Biden administra­tion has remained lukewarm on the Abraham accords. It is unclear why, they say, noting it could be because it was a Trump achievemen­t or because current officials see only limited progress under the agreement.

“The Biden administra­tion is rhetorical­ly involved,” said Michael Koplow, policy director for the Israel Policy Forum, a pro-Israel U.S. group that also supports a Palestinia­n state. “But there is no evidence that they are enmeshed in finding out what needs to happen to get other countries involved or to bring in the Palestinia­ns.”

President Biden and Blinken have had to tread a narrow line where they continue to evince that “unshakeabl­e bond” the U.S. and Israel have, while also ending or fine-tuning some of the brazenly pro-Israel policies of the previous administra­tion.

Some members of that administra­tion — Trump’s son-in-law and daughter, Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump, and former Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo — were touring parts of Israel and environs this week to celebrate the first anniversar­y of the Abraham accords.

Pompeo reportedly visited Jewish settlement­s in the West Bank, considered illegal by much of the world, with former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who recently lost reelection as he faced trial on corruption charges.

Pompeo also received the so-called Peace Through Strength Award from David Friedman, who was the previous administra­tion’s ambassador to Israel.

 ?? SECRETARY OF STATE Andrew Harnik Pool Photo ?? Antony J. Blinken is flanked by counterpar­ts Yair Lapid, left, of Israel and Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al Nahyan of the United Arab Emirates at a news conference Wednesday in Washington.
SECRETARY OF STATE Andrew Harnik Pool Photo Antony J. Blinken is flanked by counterpar­ts Yair Lapid, left, of Israel and Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al Nahyan of the United Arab Emirates at a news conference Wednesday in Washington.

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