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Another Israeli spear in the Arab world

Two Arab countries recognizing Israel in just one month is a rare historic event. First it was the United Arab Emirates, now it is Bahrain. Just think that when the Jewish State celebrated 70 years in 2018, it maintained diplomatic relations in the Arab world only with Egypt and Jordan (Mauritania once recognized Israel, then retreated) to understand the scope of what is happening and that it is very more than mere political victories by Benjamin Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, and Donald Trump, the American president who has been his patron throughout the normalization process with Sunni countries in the Middle East.

After Anwar al-Sadat signed the 1979 peace treaty between Egypt and Israel, the taboo was broken: the Jewish state could be recognized by an Arab neighbor even though the question of a homeland for the Palestinians was unresolved. Then, in 1994, it was Jordan’s turn.

In both cases, the decisions of the rulers involved a great deal of courage. In the case of Sadat, he was even murdered by Islamic fundamentalists two years later, while King Hussein only dared to take that step, taking into account the majority of Palestinians living in the kingdom, because a year before Yasser Arafat’s own PLO had negotiated with Israel. There were also prizes at stake: Egypt was recovering Sinai, lost to Israel in the Six Day War (1967), Jordan was once again gaining the confidence of the West after having supported the invasion of Kuwait by Iraqi troops.

In the case of both Israel with Egypt and Israel with Jordan, the presidents of the United States, first Jimmy Carter and then Bill Clinton, have always played a key role in normalization. And the same is now happening with Trump, who never hid his ambition to end the Israeli-Arab conflict and gave the fieldwork to his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, Ivanka’s husband. From a Jewish family and with Holocaust surviving grandparents, Kushner as a mediator in the Middle East initially appeared to be a mere case of nepotism or at best a bet on a well-meaning naive, but the results are beginning to give him some credit.

With Barack Obama, after Trump was elected, ordering the American ambassador to the United Nations not to veto a resolution condemning Jewish settlements in the West Bank, Trump barely took office was seen as the best of allies in Israel. After all, the United States was once again having a president who is unconditional in supporting Israel. And he saw in an alliance between Israelis and Sunni Arabs the best barrier against the expansion of Shi’ite Iran’s power, which both Trump and Netanyahu do not believe they have given up on looking for the nuclear weapon.

For those who like to be attentive to the signs of the changing world, Trump’s direct flight from Saudi Arabia, the first country visited as president in 2017, to Israel was revealing. Mohammed bin Salman, son and heir to King Salman, not only buys weapons in massive quantities from the United States, but understands the American strategy of building an anti-regime bloc of ayatollahs. Then, MBS, as it is known, publicly defended that the Israelis have the right to live in peace in their land.

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