The Guardian (USA)

Foe of a foe – the shared interests that make UAE a 'friend' of Israel

- Martin Chulov Middle East correspond­ent

The peace deal that few saw coming had been gathering steam in plain sight. Even before the election of Donald Trump, Israel and the UAE had been inching closer, drawn together by three factors – enmity with Iran, a loathing of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, and a mutual belief that the agreed formula for peace with Palestinia­ns was no longer working.

More than anything else, combating Iran became the conduit for the two sides. The adage of a foe of a foe becoming a friend has rarely been more apt. Tehran’s determinat­ion to acquire a nuclear weapon, its extensive reach into the Arab world, potential to shut off the Strait of Hormuz, and Shia Islamic revolution­ary zeal, provided enough common ground for both sides to sharply deepen intelligen­ce links to strategic levels over the past four years.

Trust grew, as faith in the Palestinia­ns waned, particular­ly in Abu Dhabi, where Israeli claims that the bedrock approach of land for peace was broken had won resonance, and the two-state solution, which had underwritt­en a collective Arab approach to peace, had been eclipsed by more pressing realities.

That the warming ties were taking place as the Trump administra­tion shredded convention­s on Israel/Palestine did not seem to matter. Moving the US embassy to Jerusalem, slashing US funding for Palestinia­n refugees, annexing the Syrian Golan Heights, expanding settlement­s, closing the Palestinia­n embassy to Washington, and introducin­g a peace plan that ignored nearly every premise of earlier approaches, were all set aside.

Arab solidarity on Palestine had clearly splintered by the time Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, rolled out his version of a solution. That plan gave Israel a lot of what it sought and diminished Palestinia­n aspiration­s. The sum of the proposal was substantia­lly less than that tabled between Ehud Barak and Yasser Arafat in 2000. Mahmoud Abbas turned up his nose and has boycotted Trump ever since.

A less than full-throated rebuke followed from Arab states, which had drawn legitimacy for decades by being protectors of the Palestinia­ns but which now had other priorities. Things were changing quickly.

The effect of the UAE crown prince, Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, putting his name to a US deal that puts his country on a peace footing with Israel is profound. The concession the prince won from Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, to suspend plans to annex parts of the West Bank allows the state to still position itself as a champion of the Palestinia­ns. But the net loss for the Palestinia­n people dilutes that.

Only several events have had the same impetus for Israel since its declaratio­n of independen­ce in 1948 – among them the 1978 Camp David accords that led to peace with Egypt, the pact with Jordan signed 17 years later, and the Oslo accords of 1993 where Israel and the Palestinia­ns formally recognised each other. And now this.

The impact is just as significan­t for the Palestinia­ns, who are now confrontin­g a paradigm shift that leaves them further away than ever from self determinat­ion. The splintered diaspora is ever more entrenched across silos in the shrinking West Bank and the besieged Gaza Strip, as well as in Lebanon, Jordan, Syria and Egypt.

Reconcilin­g falling fortunes on the ground with the stark new regional realities is wrenching for the Palestinia­n leadership, which has appeared paralysed in recent years and increasing­ly at odds with key patrons – one of the most important of which is no longer shy about acknowledg­ing it.

More than at other times the UAE now is a geo-political engine room of the region. Zayed has taken interventi­onist positions on Yemen and Qatar and positioned himself as the lynchpin of an axis opposing Ankara, Doha and the remnants of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d.

The UAE’s stake in the Libya conflict can be viewed through the same lens. The forsaken Palestinia­ns, meanwhile, have received aid to tackle the coronaviru­s, and lip service about existentia­l issues.

The UAE’s lead position on a peace deal is unlikely to leave it isolated for long. As Trump touts a rare diplomatic win, rumblings abound in the GCC (Gulf Cooperatio­n Council) states that others will soon follow; Bahrain and Oman being likely candidates, and possibly the regional heavyweigh­t, Saudi Arabia, whose signature would mark a seismic event in the history of the Middle East, and in global geopolitic­s.

Enlisting Riyadh as a partner of Israel had been unthinkabl­e under templates that governed how the conflict was managed, and how it could be solved. Saudi Arabia’s former leader, King Abdullah, had been a champion of a 2002 approach that would lead to collective Arab recognitio­n of Israel in return for a withdrawal to the boundaries that demarcated the nascent state and Palestinia­n territorie­s before the 1967 war.

Accepting what is on offer now would have been unthinkabl­e. But attitudes of Arab states have shifted so markedly that some now see the Palestinia­n cause as a distractio­n from broader issues and its leaders as a drain on their time and resources.

The two-state solution was barely kicking when Trump took office. It is flatlining now. While Israel celebrates, Palestinia­ns are facing one of their most bitter reckonings.

 ??  ?? Trump’s son-in-law and White House adviser Jared Kushner, centre, at a press briefing on the Israel-UAE agreement on 13 August. Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters
Trump’s son-in-law and White House adviser Jared Kushner, centre, at a press briefing on the Israel-UAE agreement on 13 August. Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

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