UAE and Israeli settlers find common ground in Jerusalem
By James M.
Dorsey
Weakened by
Joe Biden’s electoral defeat of US President Donald J. Trump, Israeli Prime
Minister Binyamin Netanyahu risks being caught between a rock and a hard place
as Jordan, the Palestine Authority and the United Arab Emirates manoeuvre for control
of what is to Jews the Temple Mount and to Muslims the Haram ash-Sharif, the
third most holy site in Islam.
The rivalry for control of
Jerusalem’s most sensitive, emotive, contested, and potentially explosive place
is occurring against the backdrop of a parallel and interlinked run-up to a competition
for the succession of Mahmoud Abbas, the frail 84-year old Palestinian
president.
The Jerusalem site has been
administered since Israel conquered East Jerusalem in the 1967 Middle East war
by the Jordanian and Palestinian-controlled Supreme Muslim Council.
Rivalry for the religious control of
the site that hosts the Al Aqsa Mosque and is where the First Jewish Temple was
built by King Solomon in 957 BC involves multiple risks for Mr. Netanyahu.
Mr. Netanyahu’s inclination to back attempts
by the UAE with Saudi Arabia, home to Mecca and Medina, Islam’s holiest cities,
in the background, to muscle their way into the administration of the Haram
ash-Sharif could complicate relations with Jordan and widen differences with
the Palestine Authority.
The UAE enhanced its ability to
manoeuvre by establishing diplomatic relations with Israel and rushing to forge
closer ties to the country’s political, security and economic elites.
In a twist of irony, the UAE finds
common ground with the Israeli settler movement and the Jewish far-right in
wanting to weaken Jordanian-Palestinian control of the Haram ash-Sharif and
counter Turkish efforts to stoke Palestinian nationalist and religious sentiment. The settlers
and the far-right are calling for internationalization of the administration of
the Haram ash-Sharif, which plays into the UAE’s hands.
“Ironically, it may be the case that
calls for just such an arrangement may come from Muslim citizens of countries
that have normalized their ties with Israel and find it offensive that a small
group of Palestinians are attempting to ban them from visiting one of their
holiest sites,” said Josiah Rotenberg, a member of the Board of Governors
of the Middle East Forum, a Philadelphia-based right-wing think tank.
The UAE’s recognition of Israel and
willingness to engage not only with businesses located in Israel’s pre-1967
borders but also those headquartered in Israeli settlements on the occupied West Bank and invest in a technology park
in East Jerusalem has fuelled a war of words with the Palestinians and sparked incidents
with Emirati visitors to the Haram ash-Sharif.
"Most of the citizens of Israel,
myself included, continue to... demand that Prime Minister Netanyahu apply full
sovereignty to Judea and Samaria," said settlement leader Yossi Dagan after heading a settlers’ delegation
on a visit to Dubai to discuss business opportunities. Mr. Dagan was using the
biblical name of the West Bank.
The visit reinforced Palestinian
assertions that the creation of diplomatic ties between Israel and Arab states
prior to a resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict would reinforce
Israeli occupation rather than open the door to the establishment of a
Palestinian state alongside Israel.
The “Israeli-Emirati deal raises the
concern and fear within the Jordanian Awqaf and among Palestinians, because it
aims to give the UAE a new role inside al-Aqsa,” said former Palestinian
minister of Jerusalem affairs Khaled Abu Arafa, referring to the Supreme Muslim Council.
Muhammad Hussein, the grand mufti of Jerusalem,
didn’t need Mr. Dagan’s statement to come to that conclusion.
Resigning in protest from an Emirati
clerical group established to project the UAE as a beacon of moderate Islam
immediately after the announcement of UAE-Israel relations, Mr. Hussein banned
Muslims from the Emirates from visiting and praying at Al-Aqsa Mosque.
An Emirati business delegation
visiting Israel last month was verbally assaulted and told to go home by
Palestinian worshippers when they went to pray at the mosque.
Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shatiyyeh scolded the Emiratis, saying that “one ought to enter the gates of the
blessed Al-Aqsa Mosque by way of its owners, rather than through the gates of
the occupation.”
Responding on Twitter, Laith al-Awadhi, an Emirati national, retorted: “We
will visit Al-Aqsa because it does not belong to you, it belongs to all
Muslims.”
Saudi lawyer and writer Abdel Rahman al-Lahim chipped in arguing that "it is
very important for the Emiratis and Bahrainis to discuss with Israel ways of
liberating Al-Aqsa Mosque from Palestinian thugs in order to protect visitors
from Palestinian thuggery."
Mr. Abbas, the Palestinian president,
has slowed down a reconciliation between his Fatah movement and Hamas, the Islamist group that controls
the Gaza Strip, in anticipation of a more empathetic policy by an incoming
Biden administration.
Mr. Abbas broke off relations with
the United States after Mr. Trump produced an Israeli-Palestinian peace plan
that endorsed annexation, recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and cut
off funding for the Palestinians.
Palestinian officials suspect the
UAE, backed by Israel, of positioning Mohammed Dahlan, an Abu Dhabi-based former Palestinian security chief with close ties to
Emirati Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed as well as US officials, as a potential
successor to Mr. Abbas.
Mr. Abbas could be disappointed by
the degree to which a Biden administration may reverse Mr. Trump’s policy and
find that it may not oppose broadening the administration of the Haram
ash-Sharif.
In an interview with The Times of Israel, Anthony (Tony) Blinken, Mr. Biden’s
top foreign policy advisor and a former senior official under President Barak
Obama, signalled that Mr. Biden would, in contrast to Mr. Trump, oppose Israeli
efforts to annex parts of the West Bank and could adopt a more critical
attitude towards expansion of existing Israeli settlements.
It would likely be a position
endorsed by the UAE despite the Emirates’ engagement with the settlers.
Mr. Blinken insisted that a two-state
solution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was the “only way to ensure
Israel’s future as a Jewish and democratic state and also to fulfil the
Palestinian right to a state of their own.”
With both Israel and the Palestinians
“far from a place where they’re ready to engage on negotiations or final status
talks” Mr. Blinken said that a Biden administration would seek to ensure that
“neither side takes additional unilateral steps that make the prospect of two
states even more distant or closing it entirely.”
The Biden administration could well
see broadening of the governance of Haram ash-Sharif as one way of achieving
that goal.
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 and the National
University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute.
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