Anonymous ID: 149608 Sept. 15, 2020, 12:08 p.m. No.10658499   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8705 >>8936 >>8997 >>9021

Trump hails new 'dawn' for Middle East as Israel signs accords with Bahrain and UAE

 

President Trump declared the “dawn of a new Middle East” as he oversaw the signing of pacts between Israel and two Arab nations, an event he hopes will pave the way for increased stability in a volatile region and cast him as a peacemaker ahead of November’s election. Hundreds of diplomats, lawmakers, and officials gathered on the South Lawn of the White House on Tuesday afternoon to witness the normalizing of relations between Israel, Bahrain, and the United Arab Emirates — the first time in more than 25 years that Arab nations have signed agreements with Israel. However, Palestinian officials have denounced the so-called Abraham Accords as a stab in the back by fellow Arab nations. Speaking from the White House balcony, Trump said more nations would follow in signing deals. "We're here this afternoon to change the course of history. After decades of division and conflict, we mark the dawn of a new Middle East,” he said. “Thanks to the great courage of the leaders of these three countries, we take a major stride toward a future in which people of all faiths and backgrounds live together in peace and prosperity.” Minutes later, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu signed accords with Emirati Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al Nahyan and Bahrain’s Foreign Minister, Abdullatif al Zayani. COVID-19 restrictions deprived Trump of the chance for any made-for-TV handshake moments.

 

Even so, the signing marks a diplomatic breakthrough for Trump, who touted his deal-making abilities during his 2016 run for the White House only to struggle once in office with seemingly intractable standoffs with everyone from Democrats in Congress to North Korea’s Kim Jong Un. Skeptics point out that the Abraham Accords are not technically peace deals and worry that they do little to advance regional stability when Palestinians are further isolated. To illustrate the point, protesters gathered in the West Bank and Gaza, where they burned pictures of Trump and Netanyahu. The agreements follow months of negotiations led by Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and lay a framework for diplomatic, economic, and other ties between the three nations. At the same time, the accords reflect shared concern among America’s allies about the rise of Iran and its development of ballistic missiles. “I really believe Iran wants to make a deal,” said Trump during a meeting in the Oval Office with Netanyahu in which he presented the Israeli leader with a gold key. “I want Iran to be a great country.” Before sitting to sign the deals, Netanyahu said: “This day is a pivot of history. It heralds a new dawn for peace.”

 

The Israeli-American Council described the deals as “historic.” “Both Israel and the US administration have expressed their hope and desire for peace with additional countries in the region and the IAC calls on other Arab countries to follow suit,” it said in a statement. “These historic agreements are proof that the path towards a more prosperous Middle East is through recognition and cooperation rather than through isolation and extremism.” Others urge caution and say real progress would require other nations, such as Saudi Arabia, to come on board. Michael Hanna, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation think tank, said the agreements amounted to a public ratification of existing contacts rather than a reshaping of the troubled region’s security environment. “This will generate change in business-to-business contacts. That’s the big thing,” he said. “As many, many people have said, it is a misnomer to call them peace agreements. These countries weren’t at war, and it’s silly to think of them in terms of the way the Egypt-Israel peace treaty or Jordan peace treaty were described.”

 

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/trump-hails-new-dawn-for-middle-east-as-israel-signs-accords-with-bahrain-and-uae

Anonymous ID: 149608 Sept. 15, 2020, 12:14 p.m. No.10658575   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8705 >>8936 >>8997 >>9021

Pompeo touts end of Palestinian 'veto' over Arab-Israeli ties

 

Palestinian officials no longer have the power to "veto" the expansion of Arab-Israeli relations, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said while applauding new diplomatic accords between American allies in the Middle East. “For decades, this town, foreign policy with respect to the Middle East, gave the Palestinians a veto right that they could act in a way that prevented any Arab nation from engaging with the most important democracy in the Middle East,” Pompeo told the Atlantic Council on Tuesday. “We took a different view.” Pompeo and U.S. officials credit their focus on the threats emanating from Iran as the organizing principle of the normalization of ties between Israel and two Gulf Arab nations — Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates. Delegations from the three countries convened at the White House on Tuesday to sign the Abraham Accords, in addition to separate agreements between Israel and each country. “This peace will eventually expand to include other Arab states and ultimately help bring an end to the Arab-Israeli conflict once and for all,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday at the White House. “Let us feel on this day the pulse of history. For long after the pandemic is gone, the peace we make today will endure.”

 

The agreements represent a substantial diplomatic shift for the Arab states, which historically have refused to establish formal ties with Israel due to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Palestinian officials have decried the deals as "a betrayal” of their cause, alleviating pressure on Israel to agree to the formation of a Palestinian state, although UAE officials maintain that they are not abandoning that effort. “For the Emiratis, this is still the beginning of a process of negotiations with the Israelis and Americans, and I would expect they will continue to seek — and receive — more for their gestures toward Israel,” the Center for Strategic and International Studies senior vice president Jon Alterman wrote Tuesday. ”A senior Emirati official recently told me that if Israel wants peace, the only way that they can get it is through an agreement with the Palestinians, which normalization of relations with the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain quite clearly is not. What it is, instead, is a collapse of Arab solidarity on the Palestine question that had been in place for three-quarters of a century.” Pompeo suggested that the collapse has spread even beyond Bahrain and the UAE. “It shouldn’t go without notice — not only have these nations chosen to recognize Israel, but when the Gulf states all got together and the Palestinians demanded that there be a statement denouncing what took place, that did not occur," he said. "And so, yes, there is a big shift in how these alliance are set.”

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/policy/defense-national-security/pompeo-touts-end-of-palestinian-veto-over-arab-israeli-ties