Ignore at your peril: Palestine ranks high in Arab public opinion
By James M.
Dorsey
Rare polling
of public opinion in Saudi Arabia suggests that Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman may be more sensitive to domestic public opinion on foreign policy issues such as Palestine than he lets on.
The polling also indicates that a substantial number of Saudis is empathetic to
protest as a vehicle for political change.
The poll
conducted on behalf of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy is likely
to reinforce Prince Mohmmed’s resolve to crackdown on any form of criticism or
dissent at a time that the kingdom is struggling with the economic fallout of
the coronavirus pandemic and a steep fall in oil prices and demand.
The
Washington Institute survey strokes with polling by others, including James
Zogby, an Arab-American researcher and activist and author of The Tumultuous Decade: Arab Public
Opinion and the Upheavals of 2010–2019.
Saudi
reluctance to follow in the footsteps of the United Arab Emirates in
recognizing the State of Israel suggests that autocratic Arab leaders, despite
denying freedoms of expression and the media and cracking down on dissent, are
at times swayed by public opinion. Polls are often one of the few arenas in
which citizens can voice their views.
“I know that
the Saudi government under MbS (Prince Mohammed) has put in a lot of effort to
actually do its own public opinion polls… They pay attention to it… They are
very well aware of which way the winds are blowing on the street. They take
that pretty much to heart on what to do and what not to do… On some issues,
they are going to make a kind of executive decision... On this one, we’re going
to ignore it; on the other one we’re going to…try to curry favour with the
public in some unexpected way,” said David Pollock, a Middle East scholar who
oversees the Washington Institute’s polling.
Mr.
Pollock’s most recent polling suggests that Palestine ranks second only to Iran
among the Saudi public’s foreign policy concerns.
Mr. Zogby’s
earlier 2018 polling showed Palestine as ranking as the foremost foreign policy
issue followed by Iran in Emirati and Saudi public opinion. The same year’s Arab Opinion Index suggested that 80 percent of Saudis
see Palestine as an Arab rather than a purely Palestinian issue.
Speaking in
an interview, Mr. Pollock said that with regard to Palestine, Saudi officials
“believe that they have to be a little cautious. They want to move bit by bit
in the direction of normalizing at least the existence of Israel or the
discussion of Israel, the possibility of peace, but they don’t think that the
public is ready for the full embrace or anything like that.”
Saudi Arabia
last week said it would only formalize its relations with Israel once the 2002 Arab peace plan that calls for a two-state solution
of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict had been adopted by Israel.
The UAE said
its move had been in part designed to prevent Israeli annexation of parts of the West Bank, occupied
during the 1967 Middle East war, that would have rendered the Arab peace plan irrelevant.
Mr. Zogby
suggested that widespread doubt that an Israeli-Palestinian peace can be
achieved may have softened public attitudes towards relations with Israel.
“This should
not be overstated, however, since it appears from our survey that this shift
may be born of frustration, weariness with Palestinians being victims of war,
and the possibility that normalization might bring some benefits and could give
Arabs leverage to press Israel to make concessions to the Palestinians,” Mr.
Zogby cautioned.
Public
responses in the Gulf to the formalization of the UAE-Israeli relationship have
been divided, often more diverse in countries with a greater degree of freedom
of expression and assembly.
Voices in
the UAE and Saudi Arabia, countries with tightly controlled
media and no legal political groupings, spoke out in favour of the UAE move.
Political
groups, civil society organizations, trade unions and professional associations
in Kuwait and Bahrain, many associated with the
anti-Israel Boycott, Divestment and Sanction (BDS) movement, were more critical.
A statement
by more than half of the members of
Kuwait’s parliament
insisted that there could be no normalization without a resolution of the
Palestinian problem.
Oman’s grand
mufti, Ahmed bin Hamad al-Khalili, sought to dampen potential Omani
aspirations of following in the UAE’s footsteps by declaring the liberation of
occupied land “a sacred duty.”
The
importance of public opinion in the Gulf was highlighted in the Saudi poll by
responses to the notion that “it’s a good thing we aren’t having big street
demonstrations here
now the way they do in some other countries” – a reference to the past decade
of popular revolts that have toppled leaders in among others Tunisia, Egypt,
Libya, Yemen, Algeria and Sudan.
Opinion was
split down the middle. 48 percent of respondents agreed, and 48 percent disagreed.
Saudis, like
most Gulf Arabs, are likely less inclined to take grievances to the streets.
Nonetheless, the poll indicates that they may prove to be more empathetic to
protests should they occur.
“Arabs know
what they want and what they do not want. They want their basic needs for jobs,
education, and health care to be attended to, and they want good governance and
protection of their personal rights. While they are focused on matters close to
home, at the same time they continue to care deeply about the denial of
legitimate rights and the suffering of other Arabs, whether in Palestine,
Syria, Iraq, or Yemen,” Mr. Zogby said.
A podcast
version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon and Castbox.
Dr. James
M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and a senior fellow at Nanyang
Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in
Singapore. He is also a senior research fellow at the National University of
Singapore’s Middle East Institute and co-director of the University of
Wuerzburg’s Institute of Fan Culture in Germany.
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