Pompeo, Netanyahu hopeful more Arab states will forge Israel ties
 
Israel's prime minister and the US top diplomat
voiced hope Monday the Jewish state would soon build ties with more Arab
countries, following its landmark normalisation of relations with the United
Arab Emirates.
Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu and US Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo, who started a Mideast tour in Jerusalem, both praised the
US-brokered deal as a milestone toward bringing stability to the turbulent
region.
"I'm very hopeful that we will see other Arab
nations join in this," said Pompeo, who was also set to visit Sudan,
Bahrain and the UAE on a five-day regional tour.
Netanyahu hailed the Israel-UAE agreement as "a
boon to peace and regional stability" which "heralds a new era where
we could have other nations join".
"I hope we'll have good news in the future,
maybe in the near future," he said.
Netanyahu called Israel's agreement with the
Emirates, the first of its kind in a quarter century with an Arab state, an
"alliance of the moderates against the radicals".
Washington and its close ally hope Israel will be
able to normalise ties with other regional countries traditionally hostile to
it, in part to forge a stronger regional alliance against their common arch foe
Iran.
Pompeo again stressed US President Donald Trump's
goal that "Iran will never have a nuclear weapon" and urged the
international community to maintain an arms embargo on the Islamic republic.
Israel had previously only signed peace treaties
with Egypt and Jordan, which unlike the UAE share borders with Israel and had
technically been at war with the Jewish state.
The pro-Netanyahu daily Israel Hayom said Sunday
that direct talks with the UAE on the wording of the deal were close to
starting and that "a full agreement could be reached within a month".
Under the US-brokered agreement announced on August
13, Israel pledged to suspend its previous plans to annex parts of the occupied
West Bank, without saying for how long.
The Palestinians have slammed the UAE's move as a "stab
in the back" while their own conflict with the Jewish state remains
unresolved.
The Islamist group Hamas, which rules the Gaza
Strip, Monday charged that the Israel-UAE deal helps "maintain crimes and
violations" against the Palestinians.
It urged regional and world leaders to "break
their silence to bring an end" to the Gaza blockade.
In the latest upsurge of violence, Israel has bombed
the coastal strip almost daily since August 6, while balloons carrying fire
bombs and, less frequently, rocket fire have hit Israel from Gaza.
The Israel-Emirati pact has sparked speculation on
which regional country might be next, with frequent mentions made of Bahrain
and Sudan.
Israel remains technically at war with Sudan, which
for years had supported hardline Islamist forces but which is turning its back
on the era of strongman Omar al-Bashir who was ousted last year.
The State Department said Pompeo would meet Sudanese
Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok during his tour, to "express support for
deepening the Sudan-Israel relationship".
Pompeo will also meet Bahrain's Crown Prince Salman
bin Hamad Al-Khalifa before talks with UAE foreign minister Abdullah bin Zayed
Al-Nahyan, it said.
Saudi Arabia, in keeping with decades of policy by
the majority of Arab states, has said it will not follow the UAE's example
until Israel has signed a peace deal with the Palestinians.
Israel and the UAE say they want to promote trade,
especially the sale of Emirati oil to Israel and Israeli technology to the UAE,
establish direct air links and boost tourism.
Netanyahu has denied reports that the UAE deal
hinges on the sale of US F-35 stealth fighter-jets to the Emirates, saying he
opposes a move that could reduce Israel's strategic edge in the region.
"This deal did not include Israel's acceptance
of any arms deal," he said Monday.
Pompeo said the US was determined to help UAE defend
itself against Iran and would do it "in a way that preserves our commitments
to Israel".
"The United States has a legal requirement with
respect to (Israel's) qualitative military edge. We will continue to honour
that," he said.
"But we have a 20-plus year security
relationship with the United Arab Emirates as well, where we have provided them
with technical assistance and military assistance."
Washington, Pompeo said, would "continue to
review that process to continue to make sure that we're delivering them the
equipment that they need to secure and defend their own people."
          
     
                               
 
 


