San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

SAUDI ARABIA’S AGREEMENT WITH IRAN WORRIES ISRAEL

Experts: Rapprochem­ent hampers Netanyahu’s diplomatic efforts

- BY ISABEL DEBRE & SAMY MAGDY Debre and Magdy write for The Associated Press.

News of the rapprochem­ent between longtime regional rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran sent shock waves through the Middle East on Saturday and dealt a symbolic blow to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has made the threat posed by Tehran a public diplomacy priority and personal crusade.

The breakthrou­gh — a culminatio­n of more than a year of negotiatio­ns in Baghdad and more recent talks in China — also became ensnared in Israel's internal politics, reflecting the country's divisions at a moment of national turmoil.

The agreement, which gives Iran and Saudi Arabia two months to reopen their respective embassies and re-establish ties after seven years of rupture, more broadly represents one of the most striking shifts in Middle

Eastern diplomacy over recent years. In countries like Yemen and Syria, long caught between the Sunni kingdom and the Shiite powerhouse, the announceme­nt stirred cautious optimism.

In Israel, it caused disappoint­ment — along with finger-pointing.

One of Netanyahu's greatest foreign policy triumphs remains Israel's U.s.-brokered normalizat­ion deals in 2020 with four Arab states, including Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates. They were part of a wider push to isolate and oppose Iran in the region.

He has portrayed himself as the only politician capable of protecting Israel from Tehran's rapidly accelerati­ng nuclear program and regional proxies, like Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in the Gaza Strip. Israel and Iran have also waged a regional shadow war that has led to suspected Iranian drone strikes on Israeli-linked ships ferrying goods in the Persian Gulf, among other attacks.

A normalizat­ion deal with Saudi Arabia, the most powerful and wealthy Arab state, would fulfill Netanyahu's prized goal, reshaping the region and boosting Israel's standing in historic ways. Even as backdoor relations between Israel and Saudi Arabia have grown, the kingdom has said it won't officially recognize Israel before a resolution to the decadeslon­g Israeli-palestinia­n conflict.

Since returning to office late last year, Netanyahu and his allies have hinted that a deal with the kingdom could be approachin­g. In a speech to American Jewish leaders last month, Netanyahu described a peace agreement as “a goal that we are working on in parallel with the goal of stopping Iran.”

But experts say the Saudi-iran deal that was announced Friday has thrown cold water on those ambitions. Saudi Arabia's decision to engage with its regional rival has left Israel largely alone as it leads the charge for diplomatic isolation of Iran and threats of a unilateral military strike against Iran's nuclear facilities. The UAE also resumed formal relations with Iran last year.

“It's a blow to Israel's notion and efforts in recent years to try to form an anti-iran bloc in the region,” said

Yoel Guzansky, an expert on the Persian Gulf at the Institute for National Security Studies, an Israeli think tank. “If you see the Middle East as a zero-sum game, which Israel and Iran do, a diplomatic win for Iran is very bad news for Israel.”

Bitterly divided and gripped by mass protests over plans by Netanyahu's far-right government to overhaul the judiciary, politician­s seized on the rapprochem­ent between the kingdom and Israel's archenemy as an opportunit­y to criticize Netanyahu, accusing him of focusing on his personal agenda at the expense of Israel's internatio­nal relations.

Yair Lapid, the former prime minister and head of Israel's opposition, denounced the agreement between Riyadh and Tehran as “a full and dangerous failure of the Israeli government's foreign policy.”

Even Yuli Edelstein from Netanyahu's Likud party blamed Israel's “power struggles and head-butting” for distractin­g the country from its more pressing threats.

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