‘Normalization’ With Israel Is Losing Popularity in Arab States, As Netanyahu Kills More Palestinians
by Connor
Freeman | Aug 3, 2023
Tensions between the Gulf States and Israel are
growing as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu oversees illegal settlement
expansion and mass killings of Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, East
Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip. This comes as the White House is attempting to forge a “normalization”
deal between Tel Aviv and Riyadh.
According to Bloomberg, Abu
Dhabi and Manama are becoming frustrated with the outcome of the 2020 Abraham
Accords. People familiar with the matter said the leadership in both the United
Arab Emirates (UAE) as well as Bahrain are particularly concerned over a
massacre Israel’s apartheid army
carried out last month in the northern West Bank.
With
the support
of the Joe Biden administration, Israeli forces invaded
and bombed the Jenin refugee camp, killing a dozen people including
five children. Israeli bulldozers tore
up the camp’s roads, electricity, and water networks. 1,000
troops participated in
the raid, along with Apache
helicopters, drones, and 150
armored vehicles.
Moreover,
since Netanyahu returned to power last December, Israel has been destabilizing
the region, carrying out drone
strikes in Iran, myriad airstrikes
in Syria, and bombing Lebanon.
Already, 2023 has been one of the deadliest years in Palestine. As Middle
East Eye reported “At
least 204 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire this year, including 36
children – a rate of nearly one fatality per day. A total of 167 people have
died in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, making 2023 one of the bloodiest
years in the occupied Palestinian territories. Another 36 people were killed in
the Gaza Strip.” In May, Israel launched a bombing campaign against Gaza – the
blockaded, open-air concentration camp – killing 33 people.
Another
point of contention is Netanyahu’s coalition which is full of extremist settlers,
Jewish supremacists, and ultra-nationalists determined to annex the West Bank
by force. Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said earlier this year that there
is “no
such thing as a Palestinian people.” The UAE condemned the mass murder in
Jenin as well as Smotrich’s comments.
On the
domestic front, Abu Dhabi and Manama received public backlash after these
incidents because of their relationship with Tel Aviv. Opinion polls conducted
by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, an Israel
lobby think tank, show significant drops in support for the Abraham
Accords. Respectively, in the UAE and Bahrain, only 27% and 20% of respondents
saw normalization with Israel – absent an end to the occupation in Palestine –
as positive. These numbers represent a 20% and 25% decrease in support over the
last three years. In Saudi Arabia, when asked if normalization with Tel Aviv
would be good for the region, just 20% of respondents said yes, a 50% drop
since 2020.
The Abraham
Accords are a thinly
veiled, American-led coalition against Iran. It is doubtful the Saudis will
want to join, given that Riyadh recently restored full diplomatic relations
with Tehran in an unprecedented, diplomatic feat brokered by Beijing.The
long-time arch rivals resumed full diplomatic relations and plan to expand
cooperation – particularly with respect to trade
and investment – while both sides have expressed interest in creating
a naval
alliance. In another move that “blindsided”
the US, Saudi Arabia has also restored relations
with Iran’s key ally Damascus.
As Aziz
Alghashian, a Riyadh-based analyst who studies the Saudi Kingdom’s policies
toward Israel, explains “This is not part of the vision some in the Abraham
Accords had — Israel wanted it as an anti-Iranian axis.” He continues, “The
region is moving in a different direction now.”
Officially,
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MbS) has taken any normalization deal with
Israel off the table unless there is a two-state solution and the millions of
Palestinian Muslims and Christians, suffering under a brutal military
occupation for nearly sixty years, are given
their own state. Netanyahu’s policies of setting
records for settlement expansion and construction in illegal Jewish-only
colonies serve solely to eviscerate even the pretense of a future
Palestinian state.
Riyadh has
reportedly issued demands to
the White House including increased access to advanced US weapons systems,
NATO-style security guarantees, and assistance building its own civilian
nuclear energy program.
Although,
MbS has reasons to be skeptical of any assurances Washington may peddle to
secure the agreement. As the Bloomberg article notes, “In a
continuing sore point, the UAE suspended talks on the purchase of advanced F-35
warplanes from the US in late 2021 after Washington insisted it cancel a
contract with China’s Huawei for 5G mobile technology. It was promised the
weapons when it agreed to establish ties with Israel. The UAE experience over
the Abraham Accords has been watched closely by Saudi Arabia.”
A major
aspect of the White House’s push for a normalization deal between Riyadh and
Tel Aviv is to curtail China’s influence in the Middle East, according to New
York Times columnist Tom Friedman. Washington is pressuring Tel
Aviv to decrease their economic ties with Beijing as well.
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