Kushner hopes for more Arab, Muslim partners for Israel ahead of UAE visit
US President Donald Trump’s national security
adviser said on Sunday more Arab and Muslim countries were likely to follow the
United Arab Emirates in normalizing relations with Israel.
The White House official, Robert O’Brien, and
Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner met Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu in Jerusalem on the eve of talks in Abu Dhabi on Monday on finalizing
formal Israel-UAE ties.
Israel and the UAE announced on Aug. 13 that they
would forge official ties under a deal brokered by Washington. The diplomatic
move reshapes the Middle East order, from the Palestinian issue to relations
with Iran.
“We believe that other Arab and Muslim countries
will soon follow the United Arab Emirates’ lead and normalize relations with
Israel,” O’Brien told reporters after talks at Netanyahu’s residence.
He did not name the states, but Israeli officials
have publicly mentioned Oman, Bahrain and Sudan.
Palestinians have condemned the UAE’s move as
abandonment of a policy of linking official relations with Israel to
achievement of Palestinian statehood in territory captured by Israel in a 1967
war.
The Trump administration has been trying to coax
other Sunni Arab countries that share Israel’s concerns about Iran to join in a
regional peace push.
Kushner, speaking alongside Netanyahu and O’Brien,
said the UAE deal was a “giant step forward” in the direction.
“To have played a role in its creation, and I say
this as the grandson of two Holocaust survivors, it means more to me and to my
family that I can ever express,” Kushner said.
Kushner, O’Brien and other US officials will join an
Israeli delegation on Monday in the first flight by an Israeli commercial
airline — El Al — to the UAE.
Speaking on Israel’s Kan public radio on Sunday,
Israeli Regional Cooperation Minister Ofir Akunis said Israel hopes to hold a
signing ceremony in Washington for the UAE deal by mid-September.
In the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Hanan Ashrawi, a
member of the Palestine Liberation Organization’s executive committee, said Kushner
and his team were “scrambling to convince as many Arab and Muslim leaders as
possible” to attend a White House signing event and give Trump a boost ahead of
the Nov. 3 US presidential election.
“They will be a prop at the backdrop of a
meaningless spectacle for a ridiculous agreement that will not bring peace to
the region,” Ashrawi said.
On Saturday, the UAE announced it was scrapping its
economic boycott against Israel. Officials from the two countries have said
they are looking at cooperation in defense, medicine, agriculture, tourism and
technology.
Netanyahu told reporters that abolishing “the
anachronistic boycott” opened the door for “unbridled” trade, tourism and
investment.
Statements issued by the UAE and Israel on Sunday
said the UAE minister of state and Israel’s agriculture minister spoke by phone
on Friday and “pledged to collaborate on projects that address food and water
security.”
The UAE, a desert state, relies on imports for
around 80 percent to 90 percent of its food, and has heavily encouraged
investments in recent years in agricultural technology and farmland investments
abroad.



