UAE and Bahrain start a new chapter in Arab-Israeli ties
In what seemed like a re-enactment of ceremonies
that have come before, nearly 1,000 people gathered on the South Lawn of the
White House on Tuesday to watch Arab and Israeli leaders sign landmark
normalization accords. In addition to the promise of a new page in Jewish-Arab
relations, the event generated photo-ops that President Donald Trump will find
useful as he heads down the final stretch of the 2020 presidential campaign.
Despite the inevitable feeling of deja vu, the
signing of the Abraham Accords declaration is different in important respects
from the treaties that were signed by Egypt’s Anwar Sadat, Jordan’s King
Hussein and Palestine’s Yasser Arafat. For one, the immediate objective is not
the cessation of military hostilities or the creation of a Palestinian state,
but rather “normalization” of relations between Israel and two Gulf states that
have been on the sidelines of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
The White House ceremony was also different in that
it took place against the backdrop of a global pandemic that has claimed the
lives of almost 200,000 people in the US and hundreds more in the three
signatory countries: Israel, the UAE and Bahrain. The mask-wearing attendees
visible in photos and videos of the gathering are likely to become markers of a
most unusual period in modern world history.
That said, a peace accord with an Arab country has
always been critical to Israel’s foreign-policy vision. Sealing deals with two
Arab countries at the same time can only be described as a dream come true for
an Israeli leader, in this case Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. As for
President Trump, who brokered the agreements, he has come in for praise even
from liberal American media outlets, who have described the Abraham Accords
declaration as a major political achievement.
Most US reports in the run-up to Tuesday’s event
listed in detail the Israeli attendees, noting that the agreements would be
signed by Netanyahu and witnessed by Trump. By contrast, the representatives of
the UAE and Bahrain, who countersigned the documents for their countries, were
described as the “foreign ministers of the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain,”
not respectively as Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Nahyan and Abdullatif bin Rashid
Al-Zayani.
Trump emphasized that his team “wanted this to
happen so badly … they doubted it would happen.” That team included several
administration officials who have strong personal ties to Israel through their
politics and their faiths, including Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and
White House senior adviser; Avi Berkowitz, special representative for
international negotiations; and David Friedman, the US ambassador to Israel.
All in all, the agreement was a diplomatic master
stroke for Israel and a coup for Trump’s re-election campaign, which has the
support of many significant voting blocs, notably Jewish Americans and
Evangelical Christians. What cast a shadow, however, was the flat-out rejection
of the accords by the Palestinians as well as the continued ill feeling between
the Israeli and Palestinian governments.
These aspects of the Abraham Accords are in sharp
contrast to the handshakes that took place on Sept. 13, 1993, at the White
House South Lawn between Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin, with President Bill Clinton looking on. Tuesday’s
ceremony came exactly 27 years to the week from that historic moment, which was
also packed with the promise of a new page in Israeli-Arab relations. Rabin was
assassinated, two years later, by an Israeli extremist in November 1995.
Will this
time be different? While thanking Trump and officials of the UAE and Bahrain,
Netanyahu did not explicitly mention Palestinians when he said the accords
would bring peace to “all.” But in an interview with Arab News, Ronald Lauder,
a billionaire businessman and chairman of the influential World Jewish
Congress, welcomed the Abraham Accords and emphasized that the Palestinian
issue was still a priority.
“I think that this is a historic agreement between
Israel and the UAE and between Israel and Bahrain. It opens up the entire
region; it is a question of starting to believe in each other,” he said.
“This is going to have a ripple effect throughout
the Middle East. I believe there will be other countries joining very shortly
in this phase. And I believe very, very much that the Palestinians, seeing what
is happening, will finally say it is time to come to the peace table and will
sit down with Israel and the United States and say let’s talk peace.”
Earlier, Jamal Al-Musharakh, Director of Policy
Planning at the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said the agreement signed by
his country will create a “new environment” that will foster and nurture peace
not only between Israel and other Arab states but also with Palestinians
themselves.
“We have not abandoned the Palestinians,” he told
Arab News. “It is a strategic shift. The deal provides a more optimistic view
of the future and will result in benefits for all in the region, including for
the Palestinians. But the Palestinians need to engage with the peace process
themselves.”
The domestic political implications of the
normalization agreements will be analyzed deeply by American pundits in the
weeks to come. The UAE-Israel agreement was sealed on Aug.13 while the
Bahrain-Israel deal materialized just last week.
White House officials, including Berkowitz, told
reporters in a recent background briefing that the UAE agreement is much more
detailed than the Bahrain deal, which is still being discussed.
Skeptics argue that the objective of the exercise in
peace-making is essentially Trump’s re-election. The White House added grist to
the mill by issuing a formal press release on Sept. 9 announcing that Trump had
again been nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize.
As far as Israeli politics is concerned, the
recognition by two Arab states has helped bolster the political standing of
Netanyahu, who endured three tightly fought elections before he could reach a
power-sharing deal with his rival, Benny Gantz.
Many questions remain to be answered. Will more Arab
countries sign agreements with Israel and which ones are they? Lauder said he
hoped Saudi Arabia and Morocco would be next.
Will the agreements lead to a new wave of
negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians? In the fullness of time, how
will the hardliners in Iran, Lebanon’s Hezbollah, Gaza’s Hamas rulers and the
Qataris react to the Abraham Accords?
Such questions may not have been uppermost in the
minds of the attendees of the Sept. 15 White House gathering, but then
Washington, D.C. is a world away from the furies of the Middle East. According
to media reports, Hamas militants in Gaza fired two rockets into southern
Israel, wounding two people, in an attack that was apparently timed to coincide
with the signing ceremony.