Gaza Crisis Splits Arab States
- No common condemnation of Israel as silence over bombing of occupied territory puts UAE, Bahrain, Morocco, Sudan at odds with their citizens
For the first time in numerous clashes between the State of Israeli and the occupied territory, regional unity among Arab states over who is to blame and what should be done to stop the fighting is seriously facing a huge challenge.
Interestingly, with both Israel and the Palestine continue pressing closer to all-out war, the Arab world seem to be fighting a new battle for the narrative
Reports indicate that while some states with Muslim majorities, such as Turkey and Iran, have openly accused Israel of incitement at the al-Aqsa mosque and committing atrocities in Gaza, other countries that hitherto had taken tougher stand during previous flare-ups are more restrained this time around.
According to the reports, this relative silence is being led by states that made peace with Israel in the last year of the Trump administration and are now standard bearers of the so-called Abraham Accords.
The United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan, which all recently normalised ties with Israel, now find themselves balancing their new relationships against citizens who have been vocal in their anger at Israel’s violence.
Long-time observers of the crisis-ridden relationship between Israel and Palestine say the divergent reactions to this round of fighting have put some regional powers in a difficult position with their own populations.
“It is extraordinary, in this denial position of the Emiratis in particular, that they have not uttered hardly a single criticism of what is happening in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories,” said Chris Doyle, Director of the Council for Arab-British Understanding (CAABU).
“It is sending out a signal from the Emirati leadership that we are not going to be swayed away from this burgeoning alliance with Israel, which they consider to be valuable to future plans; this includes countering Iran, Turkey and the Muslim Brotherhood groups.
“There is plenty of room to make a very supportive statement of the rights of the Palestinians, without endorsing Hamas. And they haven’t done that.”
In what appeared to be a state-backed response, the hashtag “Palestine is not my cause” circulated in the UAE, Bahrain and Kuwait over the weekend. It made little dent in region-wide support for Twitter accounts from Gaza and East Jerusalem decrying scenes of violence and the Israeli leadership.
“[These governments] are on the wrong side of public opinion in how they’re seen and received by the populations of the Arab region,” said Mohanad Hage Ali, research fellow at Carnegie Middle East Centre.
“They’re trying to pursue an active foreign policy holding positions that they’ve never had before. They could be seen as synonymous with the Israeli occupation and the Israeli policy in the region. This will have an impact on not only Israel, but their new Arab allies. And this will tarnish their reputation.”
“The regimes are very nervous about Arab public opinion,” said Doyle. “These scenes of the bombing of Gaza will make the leadership seem very worried and make them wish they would end sooner rather than later.”
Coverage of the conflict has been nearly non-existent in UAE newspapers and muted in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, which is yet to sign up to a peace deal with Israel, but has given hints that it may do so.
The Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, visited Saudi heir, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, in Neom on the Red Sea coast earlier this year. Ties between the two states are deeper than ever, even without concrete moves towards a peace deal.
Riyadh’s position has placed a two-state solution at the centre of any solution, a stance long adopted by the Arab League. It has not chosen more confrontational language than the region’s smaller players.
“What we’ve seen in the past is that the king and the crown prince do not necessarily see the conflict in the same way, and the king would be more inclined to be critical”, the reports claimed – The Guardian