Emirati Writer: Now Is The Time To Make Peace With Israel, In Order To Resolve Palestinian Issue And Join Forces In Fighting Iran

MEMRI

In an article in the English-language Saudi daily Arab News titled “A Window Has Opened for Middle East Peace — Let’s Grab the Chance,” prominent Emirati businessman and writer Khalaf Ahmad Al-Habtoor states that the Arabs and Israel currently have a vested interest in settling their differences and making peace, in order to join forces in fighting their common enemies: Iran and its allies. He stresses, however, that such cooperation between Israel and the Arabs will be difficult without making progress towards the resolution of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. To this end, he advises both the Palestinians and Israelis to put aside their grievances and unrealistic expectations, and work together to find a pragmatic and feasible solution to the conflict. Addressing Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, he urges him to turn to Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states, in whom he will find true allies for advancing peace with the Palestinians and also for fighting Israel’s and the Arab’s common enemies.

The following are excerpts from his column:[1]

“The human race [has been]… successful in resolving the bitterest of conflicts. Who could have imagined that Germany and Japan would become two of the closest US allies, or that the Berlin Wall would fall and free Soviet satellite nations from communism? Humanity always finds a way forward on the path to peace, with one exception — the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which has dragged on painfully in one form or another since the birth of the Israeli state, condemning millions to misery.

“This untenable situation has resulted in serial wars between Israelis and Arabs, and the failure to reach an accord is not for the want of trying on the part of mediators. In 2000, a Palestinian state was close to being a reality but was thwarted by leadership changes in Israel and the US, where voters delivered hawks.

Any efforts in that direction since then have been nothing more than token. Palestinian hopes have been dimmed and most fear they have been abandoned by the community of nations and by a Palestinian-fatigued media.

“I have been batting for my Palestinian brothers and sisters since I rushed home as a boy to listen to the Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s weekly radio addresses. Former Palestinian President Yasser Arafat was a personal friend of mine, and to this day I do what I can to alleviate the financial burdens of Palestinians in dire need. It should go without saying that I would love in my lifetime to see a Palestinian state emerge on 1967 borders, but reality dictates that pragmatism must prevail over what has become a mirage.

“I was once an idealist; no longer. Unrealistic dreams are of no use to a people yearning for a place where they can live peacefully and prosper in dignity. The painful truth is that resistance against a militarized, nuclear state has served only to elicit a brutal backlash, encouraging the occupying power to dig in its heels.

In short, it is time to implement new strategies requiring creative thinking and courage from all sides. A brand new page must be turned; a clean slate where the dredging up of past injustices has no place. Right now is the moment to write a new chapter, Israelis and Arabs together.

“‘Israelis and Arabs together’ — the very phrase will offend the ears of many entrenched Israeli and Palestinian supporters, but since we are the parties to the conflict, is there any other way? If so, tell me about it. To quote the late Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, whose life was taken because of his peace efforts in partnership with Arafat: ‘You don’t make peace with friends. You make it with enemies.’

You may be asking yourself, why now, when there is a pro-Israel president in the White House and Israel has a hardliner prime minister?

“In my opinion, it is now or never. First, US President Donald Trump would be ecstatic if he were the only US leader to secure such a deal. Second, and most important, the implacable enemies of Israel are also the enemies of almost all Gulf states and their Arab allies. Combating those mutual threats rests on cooperation between threatened countries. As they say, the enemy of my enemy is my friend.

“There is one state which, together with its overt and covert allies and proxies, is the greatest supporter of terrorism in the region and further afield: Iran. It operates on medieval values; it craves an Ottoman-style empire and disseminates a poisonous, backward ideology. Its aggression harms the Arab world and is seen in Israel as a threat to its very existence. Close cooperation between Saudi Arabia and Israel on that front would stop Iran’s ambitions in their tracks.

“The late Saudi King Abdullah offered an olive branch in 2002 during an Arab League Summit in Lebanon in the form of the Arab Peace Initiative, a solid proposal based on a two-state solution. Israel left the offer hanging. Perhaps, then, the timing was not right.

“The logical step now is for Israel to recognize the legitimacy of Palestinian aspirations by agreeing to a viable Palestinian state; or, at the very least, working toward a one-state solution with seriousness and dedication. Both the Israeli and the Arab sides should offer security guarantees backed by the US.

Israel’s defense chief Gadi Eisenkot told the online Arabic language journal Elaph this week that Israel was ready to share intelligence with ‘moderate’ Arab states such as Saudi Arabia to thwart Tehran, which he accused of ‘seeking to take control of the Middle East… we must prevent this from happening.’

“I could not agree more, but in the absence of any vision to improve Palestinian lives, cementing ties with Israel would engender conflicting emotions within the minds of Arab leaderships and peoples. Surely relinquishing land mostly populated by Palestinians is a relatively small price to pay for an enduring peace with almost the entire Arab world that would bring mega economic, diplomatic and social rewards to all participating states. The only alternative is one state in which Israelis and Palestinians live side by side, enjoying equal rights.

Lastly, I would remind Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the half-open window of opportunity to end decades-old tensions can shut just as fast as it opened. It has been created by a confluence of circumstances whereby Israelis and Arabs must overcome the nefarious schemes of a common enemy.

“Mr. Netanyahu, this is your one chance to make history, not only as an Israeli patriot but as a peacemaker, a man capable of displaying pragmatism for the benefit of your people and ours. Let us put our hatred and fears behind us so that we deliver freedom to generations of Palestinians while beating back those wishing to do us harm.

“As a first step, I advise you to approach the Saudi leadership as well as other Gulf Cooperation Council member states, such as the UAE and Bahrain, with sincere resolve. If you do, I strongly believe you will encounter fertile ground in which the first seeds of peace can be planted. Be brave enough to take a leap. Create a legacy of which you can be proud to safeguard generations of Israelis and Arabs to come.”

 

[1] Arab News (Saudi Arabia), November 23, 2017.

December 4, 2017 | 3 Comments »

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  1. “”Major-General George Keegan, former head of the U.S. Air Force Intelligence, has said
    that a “profound change in Arab strategy is now underway… It is not understood in the U.S.
    I have seen intelligence which very few Americans have access to, that persuades me that
    the first element of that strategy is that the feudal leadership in the Arab world strikingly
    remain committed, Messianically, to the extermination of Israel as a nation and as a people.
    What has changed about that Messianic determination … is the apparent Arab realization
    that after four futile wars, the direct [i.e., military] approach now appears to be one of such
    high risk that they are beginning to use the strategy of the indirect approach [namely,
    diplomatic duplicity].” (Jerusalem Post Magazine, August 5, 1977, p. 5 et seq.) ”

    https://afsi.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/SadatsStrategy_Eidelberg1.pdf

    “In his Knesset speech and on countless other occasions, Sadat
    declared that the right of the “Palestinian people” to self-determination is
    the “crux of the entire problem,” even of the entire Middle East problem
    (Hitler said that the rights of the Sudeten Germans to self-determination
    is the “core of the problem,” of the entire European problem!). ”

    ibid

    “One of the conditions laid down by Sadat for his visit to Jerusalem was
    that he be allowed to make a public speech from the Knesset,”

    ibid

    “”The world is opposed to Israel’s actions in the territory—our
    main aim must be to exploit intelligently this international
    attitude. We must differentiate between the possible and the
    impossible; we must address the world in its own language and
    go with it as far as we can go… We must besiege Israel and
    isolate it internationally … It is absolutely not in our interest to
    allow Israel to escape from this impasse. We could raise issues
    which we know, without even thinking about it, that the world
    atmosphere is not prepared for—issues which would provide
    Israel with new arguments to convince sections of world public
    opinion that throughout the history of the conflict the Arabs
    have thought only about the destruction and elimination of
    Israel … Briefly it is not right…to allow Israel to escape the grip of world society by raising ideas which would make the world
    forget Israeli extremism by pointing to what it might imagine to
    be Arab extremism …We must not take steps unless we are
    sure they bring us closer to our goal.13”
    – Egyptian Foreign Minister shortly before Sadat’s visit.

    ibid

    “”The October War was only the spark that set off the conflict—a
    conflict that is as old as the Arab nation. This conflict started
    when we fought against the Tatars, and later, the Crusaders, in
    defense of our rights, land and honor. Today we are fighting
    against Zionism in defense of our land and values … Now after
    the October War we should never look back. In fact this
    struggle is not just a military conflict; it is a military, economic
    and political conflict. They are all links in the same chain.
    Therefore we must prepare ourselves for a prolonged conflict
    and all its relevant aspects.”14”

    – Sadat, shortly before Jerusalem visit

    “”Al Qaddafi has chosen to make the same terrible mistake
    that Arabs committed several years ago when they rejected
    everything and anything—when the Arabs turned the word `no’
    into an idol which they worshipped, burned incense around,
    and in the process, burned all their bridges and were halted …
    all this because the Arabs pinned the fate of the Arab nation
    and three of its generations to the word ‘no.’ In the field of
    politics, just as in the field of sports, the best player is not the
    one who kicks the ball out of the playground every time he gets
    it. This is escapism; he prefers to escape from the situation
    rather than take the ball, maneuver it through his opponents
    and then score a goal.”11”

    Sadat, shortly before Jerusalem visit

    ibid

    “Consider, therefore, the following. In September 1953, several news
    agencies reported that Hitler was still alive. On the basis of this report, a
    Cairo weekly, Al Musawwar, asked a number of Egyptian personalities
    the following question: “If you wished to send Hitler a personal letter,
    what would you write to him?” One of those questioned was Colonel
    Anwar el-Sadat. Here is his answer:
    My Dear Hitler,
    I congratulate you from the bottom of my heart. Even if you
    appear to have been defeated, in reality you are the victor. You
    succeeded in creating dissensions between Churchill, the old
    man, and his allies, the Sons of Satan. Germany will win
    because her existence is necessary to preserve the world
    balance. Germany will be reborn in spite of the Western and
    Eastern powers. There will be no peace unless Germany once
    again becomes what she was. The West, as well as the East, will
    pay for her rehabilitation—whether they like it or not. Both
    sides will invest a great deal of money and effort in Germany, in
    order to have her on their side…
    Substitute Islam for Germany and we behold, in this remarkable letter,
    the Mein Kampf of Anwar el-Sadat. Indeed, the letter to Hitler ends with
    these words: “We will not be surprised if you appear again in Germany or
    if a new Hitler rises in your wake.”5
    Two years later, in a speech celebrating the birthday of Muhammed,
    Sadat declared, with reference to the Jews: “The most splendid thing the
    Prophet Muhammed did was to drive them out of the whole Arabian
    peninsula…. They are a nation of liars and traitors, contrivers of plots…”

    ibid

  2. As with most of the Mid-East, slick, slithery words are there to deceive. How is it that the Saudi Peace plan was a righteous offer. Any with eyes could see a Trojan horse when they saw one. This man is not believable. I agree two lands for 2 people. We’re on this side of the Jordan river and the Palestinians are on the other side. Nothing else can work given the security situation and the history. Meanwhile, he’s right that both can prosper. We can teach them how to grow crops in arid situations, desalinate water etc. and they can trade our ideas and advances to the Arab world leading them into the 21st century

  3. This fellow is just as delusional about the “2 state “solution”” as all the others who want to give away Israeli Jewish land to everlasting Jew-haters, and truncate the Jewish State into an almost impossible area to defend…which it surely will have to do if the Arabs come away with any kind of “victory”

    Typical “Snatching Defeat Out Of The Jaws of Victory”.

    As for the rest of his article, that’s O.K. provided the various states work together and concentrate at the task on hand without deviation. After hating Israel viscerally for 70 years, and thirsting for the blood of the Jews for 1500 years and regarding them as kafirs, this has yet to be seen as a workable plan.