Tháng Một 22, 2022
Abraham Accords Peace Agreements
We share a vision of peace, security and prosperity in the Middle East and the world. The case of the United Arab Emirates is particularly revealing, especially given what has not happened. Concern for the Palestinians has not outweighed the UAE`s underlying interest in closer relations with Israel. For the Emiratis, this relationship serves as a counterweight to Iranian influence, a mediator of access to US weapons, an alternative source of security if the US reduces its regional presence and a potential economic windfall. When clashes broke out in Jerusalem and bombs fell on Gaza, the UAE did not severe relations with Israel or strongly condemn them. It did not seek to reverse the Abrahamic Accords or recalibrate its relations with Israel. Instead, the Israeli-Emirati partnership has continued to develop. In late May and early June – just days after the Israeli-Palestinian conflagration ended in a ceasefire – Israel and the UAE signed a tax treaty, Dubai hosted a Global Investment Forum with Israeli sponsors and high-level Israeli speakers, and a Holocaust exhibition opened in Dubai. New diplomatic offices and cooperation agreements further strengthened bilateral relations over the summer.
Minister Blinken, ladies and gentlemen, I would like to conclude by congratulating all the countries represented here today for what we have achieved together so far, underlining the continued and active commitment of the Kingdom of Bahrain to this process and looking forward to further progress in achieving our common goal of a peaceful Middle East, stable and prosperous. Thank you very much. “We welcome and support the normalization agreements between Israel and the countries of the Arab and Muslim worlds,” a Foreign Ministry official said last week in response to a JTA request for the status of the agreements. “The United States will continue to encourage other countries to normalize relations with Israel, and we will look for other ways to expand cooperation among countries in the region.” Ladies and gentlemen, my friends, today we are showing the whole region and the world that we must all act courageously to go further in achieving greater good. Thank you again, my friend Tony, for convening this important meeting, and be sure of Morocco`s unwavering and continued commitment to do whatever it takes to truly contribute to peace and stability in the region. Thank you. As the UAE and Israel celebrate the first anniversary of the Abraham Accords, they have achieved many positive results. The national interest component of the agreements is convincing. However, it is the idealistic component of the agreement that is very dubious and can rightly be questioned. Eventually, the Abraham Accords were sold to the public with noble goals. They should serve as a basis for comprehensive peace throughout the region. The authors of the agreements aim to change the way people think, from enemies to friends.
None of these noble promises were fulfilled in the first year of the agreements. No one celebrates peace in Israel, the United Arab Emirates or the United States. The new Abraham Accords Peace Institute, co-founded by Kushner, will be held on September 14. September a birthday dinner at the Four Seasons Hotel in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C., where a panel discussion with ambassadors from the three signatory states will be held. Morocco and Sudan, which have also signed normalization agreements with Israel, will also participate. Although the Institute of Peace was co-founded by Haim Saban, a prominent billionaire and donor to the Democratic Party, and ostensibly aims to promote bipartisan support for peace in the Middle East, the Trump brand shines through loud and clear. By not taking responsibility for the Abraham Accords and whispering little praise for Israel`s new relations with former Arab adversaries, US President Joe Biden is helping to draw Arab-Israeli peace – the rock of bipartisan middle East politics – into party politics. Next week will mark the first anniversary of the historic peace agreement between Israel, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates, but the White House has left it to Republicans to celebrate the occasion. President Donald Trump gathered officials from all three countries at a signing ceremony on the White House lawn, and his former Middle East team is leading the celebration of his diplomatic breakthrough with a possible look toward the 2024 election. It is doubtful that the legacy of the agreements will help the Republicans, as they hope.
After all, the epic diplomatic triumph could not stop Trump – or former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu – from being rejected. Both had touted the deals as the product of their personal political skills, but there were many other reasons for voters to reject them, including mismanagement of their country`s response to the pandemic. Colleagues and friends, Winston Churchill was right when he said, “Peace will not be preserved by pious feelings.” Yes, normalization agreements are the result of goodwill – for the most part – but more than anything else, we see action. Since the signing of the trilateral agreement and in accordance with Her Majesty`s high instructions, many bilateral actions have been undertaken. Let me name a few. Politically, too, we believe that the Abrahamic Accords will enable us to continue to support and support the peace process, which we all see as the ultimate goal of a two-State solution. This, of course, will be up to the Palestinians and Israelis to agree on this. But I think we can all be more constructive if we build a network of trust, and that network of trust, in my opinion, will allow us to put aside many of the fears of the past and replace them with hopes for the future. The past year has seen a fundamental change in Arab-Israeli relations.
First, there was the Abraham Agreement, which was signed with great fanfare at the White House on September 15, 2020. In separate agreements, the Uae and Bahrain have pledged to normalize relations with Israel. Morocco and Sudan followed a few weeks later. Some U.S. government officials at the time announced their success in negotiating historic agreements. President Donald Trump has suggested that normalization is no longer tied to Palestinian status — an issue that for decades had made israel`s deep integration into the region impossible. Last year`s agreements required Israel to refrain from de jure annexing additional territories in the West Bank. But the UAE and other signatories did not retain broader concessions such as ending the Israeli occupation or establishing a Palestinian state before signing. Today, one year after the signing of the agreements and standardization agreements, the benefits continue to grow. The apathy with which the Biden administration has treated the upcoming anniversary of the Abraham Accords reflects a tin ear. Letting Trump retain responsibility for this breakthrough in Restoring Arab-Israeli peace and not working aggressively to expand his reach is a mistake that Republicans are sure to capitalize on if they plan to return to the White House in three years. David Friedman, the U.S.
ambassador to Israel under the Trump administration, who is throwing a birthday party in Jerusalem next month. The former diplomat recently founded the Friedman Center for Peace through Strength, which will present its opening award to former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and show a documentary on the Abraham Accords at the event, co-produced by the Trinity Broadcasting Network, the largest Christian broadcaster in the United States. Pompeo appears to be positioning himself as a possible Republican presidential candidate in the event that Trump decides not to run, confident that his role in facilitating the deals will win the support of evangelical Christians in love with Israel, who form a vocal part of the Republican base. Emirati officials criticized Israel`s treatment of Palestinians at the time, but the UAE did not severe relations with Israel or freeze the diplomatic opening of the two countries. The message was clear: Israeli-Palestinian clashes would not delay or derail the Israeli-Emirati normalization process. .