Wednesday, October 28, 2015

A win for Israel on the Temple Mount - Omer Dostri



by Omer Dostri

Israel will now be able to keep a closer eye on terrorist activity and resume strategic cooperation with moderate Arab states.

The understandings reached over the Temple Mount compound are nothing new, but they're important in terms of calming tensions and creating a sense of change. The fact that Jews can't pray on the Temple Mount is already part of the status quo agreed upon by Israel and Jordan after the Six-Day War, and the part about "coordination between the authorities in Israel and the Jordanian Wakf" is also something that is already taking place. 

Israel should welcome the stipulation about setting up security cameras that will broadcast 24/7 footage of events in the compound, because it represents an important diplomatic coup (even if Jordanian officials are trying to make it difficult). This clause, which takes savvy advantage of this latest crisis to secure an advantage, will allow Israel to track and oversee terrorist activity from up close and provide the Jordanians and Sunni Arab nations with proof of it. 

Netanyahu wanted to be rescued from the tricky situation in which Israel found itself, with moderate Arab nations and the rest of the world criticizing it as the one violating the status quo, rather than the Palestinian Arabs, whose extremist religious figures take care to disrupt freedom of worship on the mount. The international proposals focused on Israel, and heavy pressure was exerted to exploit the difficult situation and demand that Israel make concessions, some of which pertained to the matter of sovereignty itself. Take, for example, the French proposal to place international observers on the Temple Mount, a move that could nibble away at Israeli control of the Old City of Jerusalem. 

The tension on the Temple Mount had to come to an end, and fast, even if it was clear to Israel that the claims of a change to the status quo were false. That's not only because of the assessment that those baseless rumors were giving the current wave of terrorism a tailwind, but also because the strategic and diplomatic danger they posed to Israel. In a debate in the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee this week, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu explained that cooperation with moderate Arab states had ground to a halt because of the tension surrounding Al-Aqsa mosque. 

That new situation, created largely because of the Iranian nuclear threat and American foreign policy swinging away from Israel and the moderate Sunni Arab states and toward the new Iranian hegemony and growing extremist Shiite and Sunni Islam -- represented by the Islamic State and Iranian metastases such as the Houthis in Yemen -- has created an axis that includes Saudi Arabia and some of the Gulf emirates, Egypt, Jordan, and Israel. This cooperation offers unprecedented strategic opportunities, and Israel doesn't want to miss them. 

The main strategic cooperation is between Israel and Jordan, who are trying to prevent Islamic State and other terrorist groups from worming their way into Jordanian territory, which would endanger both Jordan and Israel. Jordan has expressed dissatisfaction with what it called "changes to the status quo [on the Temple Mount]," but King Abdullah understands that Israel isn't actually making any. 

However, even if the king of Jordan doesn't believe the bold-faced lies of the Palestinian Arabs, his hands are tied politically and he can't afford to ignore the simmering hotbed in his own country, whose population is made up primarily of Palestinian Arabs who might start fanning the flames at any moment. That explains the king's pressuring Israel to take practical measures and not stick to declarations. The matter led to a dangerous estrangement between the two countries, the prime minister said.


Omer Dostri

Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=14161

Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.

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