Σάββατο 3 Νοεμβρίου 2018

Israel Stands by Saudi Prince Against Iran, Despite Khashoggi

Israel Stands by Saudi Prince Against Iran, Despite Khashoggi
Jonathan Ferziger
Israeli leader says opposition to ‘malign’ Iran is key goal
Saudi prince may see Israel as haven as others shun him

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has joined the rest of the world in condemning the killing of Saudi critic Jamal Khashoggi. But he doesn’t want the controversy to shatter his country’s quiet, emerging alliance with the kingdom against a common enemy -- Iran.

What happened at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul last month “was horrendous and should be duly dealt with,” Netanyahu told reporters Friday in Bulgaria, his first public comments on the Khashoggi affair. “At the same time, it is very important for the stability of the world, for the region and for the world, that Saudi Arabia remain stable.”





Benjamin Netanyahu and Boyko Borisov in Bulgaria on Nov. 2.
Photographer: Amos Ben Gersom/GPO

Khashoggi’s murder has focused attention on the power behind the Saudi throne, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. That’s causing difficulties for the U.S. and Israel, which have embraced the ambitious 33-year-old as central to their efforts to counter Iranian influence in the Middle East.

Israel and Saudi Arabia don’t have diplomatic relations but the two countries have long carried on secret political, intelligence and commercial relations -- some involving Israel’s biggest defense contractors. Netanyahu frequently talks about how several Arab neighbors are developing closer ties with Israel, partly because they share security concerns about Iran, and partly because they want access to Israeli technology. Until his remarks in Bulgaria on Friday, he almost never mentioned Saudi Arabia by name.



The timing of the comments indicates how important he sees his budding alliance with Prince Mohammed, both in battling Iran and in helping President Donald Trump secure the Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement he calls the “deal of the century.”
Oman Calling

One senior Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, said his government was lobbying the Trump administration to move on. If necessary, the official said, the U.S. might impose some kind of reprimand on the Saudis, like cancelling an arms deal, while keeping alive the core alliance against Iran.

The international outcry over the murder of Khashoggi, an insider-turned-critic, has created a dilemma for Trump, who has opposed blocking arms sales to the kingdom but is facing pressure from lawmakers to take a moral stand as mid-term elections loom.

Turkey, which is demanding that the suspects in the killing be extradited, has stopped just short of laying the blame at the door of Prince Mohammed, whose modernizing drive has been undercut by domestic repression, diplomatic bust-ups and the war in Yemen.

Trump has drawn new regional battle lines, however, by withdrawing from the 2015 Iranian nuclear accord. The European, Russian and Chinese signatories have stayed on, making Saudi Arabia central to any front Washington hopes to build against the Islamic Republic.

He has also made Saudi-Israeli ties a centerpiece of his Mideast plan, illustrating his point by flying directly to Israel after meeting the crown prince in Riyadh. Saudi authorities later gave permission for Air India to overfly their territory en route to Israel, cutting flight time by nearly three hours, while Prince Mohammed took the unprecedented step in an interview with the Atlantic magazine of acknowledging the right of Israelis to live in their own land.
Kushner Confidant

Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and head of the U.S. team preparing the Mideast peace plan, has cultivated close ties with the crown prince, who has the influence and money to prod things along, as well as the motive to reach a regional peace deal so he can openly ally with Israel against Iran. The blow to the prince’s reputation could limit his ability to swing reluctant Arab states behind the U.S. plan.

“In regional politics, this episode diminishes the stature of MBS and it erodes the premise that he will be able to build a consensus either through co-optation or coercion around the initiative that allegedly Trump is pushing behind the scenes,” said Cinzia Bianco, an analyst at Gulf State Analytics in London.



Benjamin Netanyahu and Sultan Qaboos bin Said in Oman.
Source: Oman Government

In addition to Saudi Arabia, Israel has been cultivating ties with other Gulf states. Netanyahu visited Oman on Oct. 25 for a meeting with Sultan Qaboos bin Said, the first public appearance there by an Israeli prime minister in 22 years. But his remarks Friday make clear that MBS, as the ambitious prince is known, remains central to Israel’s strategy.

“Blocking Iran is uttermost on our agenda for security, not merely for Israel but I believe for Europe and the world as well,” Netanyahu said at a conference in Bulgaria. “I think that a way must be found to achieve both goals” -- getting to the bottom of the Khashoggi killing and maintaining the front against Iran.



— With assistance by David Wainer

www.fotavgeia.blogspot.com

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