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ANALYSIS

New Arab allies face quandary as Israel shifts far-right

Israel's new hardcore rightist parties want to annex occupied West Bank land, posing a dilemma for four Arab states that recently normalized ties with Israel.

New Arab allies face quandary as Israel shifts far-right

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, 3 January 2023. (Credit: Atef Safadi/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo)

GAZA/JERUSALEM/DUBAI — Israel's sharp tilt to what is likely to be the most far-right government in its history puts its new Arab allies in the awkward position of having to work with ultra-nationalists while trying to do more for the Palestinian cause.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's cabinet, sworn in last week, includes hardcore rightist parties who want to annex occupied West Bank land, where Palestinians have long sought to establish an independent state.

This poses a dilemma for four Arab states — the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan — that recently normalized ties with Israel and now have to balance this new partnership with historic support for Palestine.

When the UAE — the Gulf business and investment hub, and a rising regional power — became the first Gulf Arab country to establish ties with Israel in 2020, it hoped that long-standing controversial issues, such as Israeli settlements, could be resolved.

While Netanyahu has said he will have the final say on policy, his government's commitment to expanding West Bank settlements and the inclusion of ultra-nationalists in his cabinet militates against any compromise with Palestinians.

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Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir is a pistol-packing, ex-member of an outlawed Jewish militant group. He came up through the Kahane Chai organization, which is blacklisted in Israel and the United States for its virulently anti-Arab doctrines.

On Tuesday he infuriated Palestinians and drew a barrage of condemnation by visiting the Al-Aqsa mosque compound, a holy site revered by Muslims and Jews that is located in East Jerusalem, captured in 1967 and later annexed by Israel.

Another of Netanyahu's coalition partners is Bezalel Smotrich, head of the far-right Religious Zionism party who, like Ben-Gvir, is a West Bank settler averse to Palestinians' self-rule, let alone their hopes of statehood.

"Both the UAE and Bahrain would have certainly not preferred this government as this will certainly test their relations with Israel," said Aziz Alghashian, a Saudi analyst specializing in Gulf-Israel relations. "If there is conflict ... both the UAE and Bahrain would experience pressure to do something."

However, Alghashian said both Gulf countries had invested political capital in their agreements with Israel — known as the Abraham Accords, named for the ancient patriarch revered by Jews, Muslims and Christians alike — and are unlikely to break ties if open conflict between Israel and the Palestinians erupts again.

Discreet contacts

For the UAE, the diplomatic breakthrough with Israel capped years of discreet contacts in important commerce and technology, and may help the Gulf monarchy craft an image as a force for stability in the turbulent Middle East.

The UAE did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on this article.

The two countries ratified a comprehensive economic partnership agreement in December, after Netanyahu's election victory. It is expected to be the widest-ranging deal of its kind between Israel and an Arab state.

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Ties have also been bolstered by shared fears that Iran poses an existential security threat to much of the region, and early signs suggest both countries want to keep the relationship strong.

UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan called Netanyahu to congratulate him on his inauguration and voice his hope "to push forward the path of partnership and peace between the two countries," the UAE state news agency said.

For its part, the Bahraini ambassador to Israel, Khaled Al Jalahma, reaffirmed its commitment to normalization. Bahrain's king "wisely ordained that we aspire to co-existence and prosperous peace. The historic Abraham Accords restored hope and underscored the importance of dialogue," the ambassador tweeted on Dec. 19.

Ben-Gvir, in a videotaped interview given at a hotel reception put on by the UAE embassy in Israel on Dec. 1 — after he signed a coalition pact with Netanyahu but before the government was installed — indicated that he was interested in developing even closer relations.

"This is the proof that one can make peace without concessions, without capitulation, but rather, peace. Peace between people who have affection for one another," he said in comments published by the conservative Israel Hayom newspaper.

Betrayal

Palestinian officials have said they feel betrayed by fellow Arabs for forging relations with Israel without first demanding progress toward the creation of a Palestinian state.

In Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Wasel Abu Youssef, a member of the Palestine Liberation Organization's Executive Committee, called on Arab states to review relations with Israel.

“Arab countries who formed normalization ties with the state of occupation are required, more than ever, to revise these agreements,” he told Reuters by phone. “What is required today is to impose a comprehensive siege and isolation against the occupation state and the government of fascist policies and to expose its crimes before the world."

That may be wishful thinking. There appears to be no sign of danger to the Abraham Accords, even though they may not be so popular on the Arab street. But Palestinian options are limited.

Netanyahu has pledged to build on the "achievement" of the Abraham Accords. He even expressed his desire to cultivate relations with Saudi Arabia, the most conservative and cautious Middle East heavyweight.

"Peace with Saudi Arabia will serve two purposes," he told the private Saudi TV channel Al Arabiya last month. "It will change our region in ways that are unimaginable. And I think it will facilitate, ultimately, a Palestinian-Israeli peace."

Saudi Arabia is opening up somewhat under its de facto leader Prince Mohammed bin Salman, but has been cool to normalize ties with Israel in the absence of progress in the Palestinians' statehood quest.

“Normalization with Israel will not help us at all; on the contrary, it will increase the brutality against us. It will cause a war [while] we will face problems and massacres," said Rawan Abu Zeid, 18, a resident of Palestinian Islamist-ruled Gaza.

Additional reporting contributed by Maayan Lubell in Jerusalem.

GAZA/JERUSALEM/DUBAI — Israel's sharp tilt to what is likely to be the most far-right government in its history puts its new Arab allies in the awkward position of having to work with ultra-nationalists while trying to do more for the Palestinian cause.Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's cabinet, sworn in last week, includes hardcore rightist parties who want to annex occupied West Bank land,...