by Philip Gordon
Ultimately, the road to normalization with the Arab states still runs through the Palestinian issue, and not the other way around.
 
			
The 
prospect of Israel normalizing its relations with Arab states is an 
enticing idea that anyone who cares about Israel or the region should 
want to see realized. Arab strategic interests are aligning with 
Israel’s; some Arab leaders’ attitudes toward Israel are changing; and 
the Arab desire to see an Israeli-Palestinian deal remains strong. 
Nevertheless, the vision of Israel normalizing its relations with Arab 
states without the agreement of the Palestinians is fanciful, and even 
modest steps toward normalization will require Israel to do much more 
than many Israelis seem to realize. Ultimately, the road to 
normalization with the Arab states still runs through the Palestinian 
issue, and not the other way around.
In the absence of progress in direct 
negotiations with the Palestinians – or any real prospects for progress,
 for that matter – many in Israel are now focusing greater attention on 
cultivating relations with the wider Arab world. From Prime Minister 
Benjamin Netanyahu to opposition leaders Yair Lapid and Isaac Herzog, 
many Israeli leaders believe that a growing confluence of interests 
between Israel and the region’s Sunni Arab states – primarily around the
 goals of containing Iran and fighting Islamist extremism – could 
provide a basis for Arab-Israeli normalization and contribute to 
progress on the long-stalled Palestinian issue. Netanyahu specifically argues
 that after years of hoping a breakthrough with the Palestinians would 
lead to better relations with Arab countries, he now thinks “this 
process could also run in the opposite direction: the normalization of 
advancing relations with the Arab world could help to advance peace - a 
more sober, stable and better-backed peace - between us and the 
Palestinians.”
The Trump administration also appears to be pinning its hopes
 on the approach known as “outside-in” – negotiating directly with Arab 
states and hoping they will use their influence with the Palestinians to
 advance agreement on Middle East peace. Arriving in Israel directly 
from Riyadh after a May 2017 summit there with more than 50 Muslim 
leaders, Trump said
 he was “deeply encouraged” by his meetings, and insisted that Saudi 
Arabia’s King Salman would “love to see peace between Israelis and 
Palestinians.” Trump told
 the Israelis there was a “growing realization among your Arab neighbors
 that they have common cause with you on this threat posed by 
Iran.” According to longtime Middle East analyst and negotiator Dennis 
Ross, “the logic of outside in is that because the Palestinians are so 
weak and divided – and because there’s a new tacit relationship between 
the Sunni Arabs and Israel – there’s the hope the Arabs would be 
prepared to do more.”
The strategic rapprochement between 
Israel and some Arab states is undeniable, and behind-the-scenes 
cooperation between them is now greater than ever. But having spent much
 of the past several months in both Israel and Arab capitals discussing 
the issue with political leaders, officials, diplomats, business people, 
and others, I believe that many of the hopes placed on normalization in 
advance of a deal with the Palestinians are misplaced. While modest 
steps toward normalization by some countries may be possible if Israel 
also acts, genuine normalization between Arab states and Israel will 
only happen in the context of comprehensive peace supported by the 
Palestinians. Moreover, even the more modest steps under consideration 
will require more significant gestures from Israel than many Israelis 
seem to realize. Israel should certainly continue to pursue better 
relations with the Arab states for a number of political, strategic, and
 economic reasons. But those looking to the Arabs for a shortcut on the 
Palestinian issue – or who think they can establish closer relations 
with the Arabs without addressing that issue – are likely to be 
disappointed.
Why Normalization Remains Unlikely
The growing confluence of interests, 
strategic rapprochement, and quiet cooperation between Israel and many 
Arab states is genuine. Israel is now far from the primary security 
priority of most Arab leaders, who share Israel’s deep concerns about 
Iran, Islamist extremism, and regional instability. In private, these 
leaders recognize that Israel does not threaten them and that there are 
strategic and economic benefits to quiet cooperation with Israel. As one
 senior Gulf official put it to me, “We and Israel now see the region in
 much the same way. Israelis are not killing our people; Iran and ISIS 
are.” Even King Salman of Saudi Arabia, which does not formally 
recognize Israel’s existence, acknowledges that Israel is a “fact.”
That said, there are still major 
political obstacles to a public Arab rapprochement with Israel. Leading 
Arab governments, particularly in Riyadh, face a vast array of threats 
to their security or even existence. They see security threats from 
Iran, Yemen, Syria, and Islamist extremist groups, including the Muslim 
Brotherhood (MB), al-Qaeda, and the Islamic State. And they see threats 
to political stability from restive, growing populations that must cope 
with rapid social and technogical change and economic austerity driven 
by low oil prices. Under these circumstances, the region’s leaders 
cannot afford to spend valuable political capital defending a public 
rapprochement with Israel that most of their citizens would consider a 
betrayal of the still-popular Palestinian cause. Previous Arab leaders 
who agreed to establish diplomatic relations with Israel – Egypt’s Anwar
 Sadat and Jordan’s King Hussein – were strong, autocratic leaders who 
felt able (wrongly, in Sadat’s case) to run the political risk of 
normalization without threatening their rule. Today’s Arab leaders do 
not, for the most part, see themselves in a position to take such 
political risks, absent a valuable and certain payoff.
On top of that is an important regional 
dimension: at a time of intense geopolitical competition with Iran, 
Saudi Arabia in particular will not want to cede the Palestinian issue 
to its rivals in Tehran, who would be sure to denounce Riyadh for any 
public rapprochement with Israel. The Iranians in that case would claim 
to be the true defenders of Muslim rights in Jerusalem and seek to 
portray Saudi Arabia – even in the eyes of its own population – as 
“stooges” of the United States and Israel. This is a risk that Saudi 
leaders cannot afford to run.
Clearly the scope of what may or may not
 be possible varies considerably among the different Arab states. Egypt 
and Jordan already have diplomatic and security relations with Israel 
that are in many ways closer than ever (even if still unpopular 
domestically). Mauritania recognized Israel in 1999, though later froze 
relations. Qatar, Oman, and Morocco have in the past exchanged 
senior-level visits with Israeli counterparts and allowed Israel to open
 trade representative offices in their countries – though those offices 
were forced to close when security crises broke out (Oman closed its 
office in 2000 after the second intifada, and Qatar did the same after 
Israel’s Operation Cast Lead in Gaza in 2009). The UAE hosts an Israeli 
mission to the Abu Dhabi-based International Renewable Energy Agency and
 could probably get away with a modest expansion of ties with Israel, 
but will not want to risk criticism from its enemies in Hamas and the 
MB. Saudi Arabia has less room for maneuver because of its special place
 in the Islamic world, the relative fragility of its political order, 
and the intensity of its regional competition with Iran. And certainly 
the governments of Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen are so heavily 
influenced by Iran that any rapprochement with Israel is out of the 
question. What unites all these diverse countries is a reluctance to pay
 the political cost of drawing publicly closer to Israel in the absence 
of something significant to show for it.
Even much-discussed partial steps toward
 normalization – such as the establishment of Arab-Israel 
telecommunications links; granting Israel overflight rights; issuing 
permits to Israeli businesses to operate in the Gulf; sports or cultural
 exchanges; or engaging Israeli diplomats at international meetings – 
will likely require more far-reaching moves by Israel than many Israelis
 seem to acknowledge. Even these modest steps would be costly to Arab 
leaders if they seemed to be done against the objections of the 
Palestinians, who continue to fear that economic and diplomatic 
normalization will come at the expense of their political aspirations, 
and believe that time is on their side. For example, the economic gestures
 Israel announced during President Trump’s May 2017 visit to Israel – 
including easing the passage for Palestinian workers into Israel, 
extending the opening hours of the Allenby crossing with Jordan; 
permitting the expansion of the industrial zone at Tarqumiya into Area 
C; and providing permits for thousands of Palestinian homes in parts of 
Area C – made little impact. While highly controversial and contested 
within the Israeli cabinet, they were seen by the Arabs as warmed-over 
versions of what has been promised many times before. Not surprisingly, 
press reports that suggested the Arab Gulf states had finalized an offer and were close to a normalization deal with Israel on the eve of Trump’s trip to the region proved premature.
Cautioned by the Palestinians, the Arabs
 remain wary of making “permanent” or “de jure” steps toward Israel in 
exchange for “de facto” Israeli steps that could easily be reversed. For
 example, they are unwilling to formally recognize Israel as a Jewish 
state, or accept the legitimacy of Israelis remaining in the major 
settlement blocs, in exchange for expanded freedom of movement or 
autonomy for Palestinians that could easily be taken away in the future.
 Indeed, the Arab League’s most recent reiteration
 of its commitment to the Arab Peace Initiative (API), which offers 
recognition of Israel in exchange for comprehensive peace with the 
Palestinians, commits Arab leaders to normalization only after 
the full withdrawal of Israeli forces from Palestinian territories is 
complete. The  fear is that any other sequence could lead to their 
recognition of Israel in exchange for a withdrawal that never actually 
takes place.
The bottom line is that there is a major
 structural difference in the way Israel and the Arabs view steps toward
 normalization. For Israel there are big advantages to making public 
intelligence, military, and economic cooperation with Arabs in that it 
would further Israel’s acceptance in the region, undercut international 
efforts to isolate Israel, and relieve some of the pressure to offer 
more concessions to the Palestinians. Israel would derive significant 
legitimacy from the establishment of formal ties with major Arab 
countries, and Israeli businesses would find new opportunities in Arab 
markets if they could openly operate there. For the Arabs, however, the 
dynamic is the opposite: making private cooperation public incurs a 
cost. Since the Arab states already receive most of what they need from 
Israel quietly, they have little incentive in expanding overt ties with 
Israel without something significant to show for it. Even Egypt and 
Jordan, which have diplomatic relations with Israel and extensive 
behind-the-scenes security and intelligence cooperation with Israel, 
remain reluctant to appear to be too conciliatory in public so long as 
their populations judge Israel’s treatment of Palestinians so 
negatively.
New Dynamics and Potential Wildcards
Attempts to involve the wider Arab 
region in efforts to advance Israeli-Palestinian peace are not new. The 
United States managed to bring most of the Arabs to the table at the 
1991 Madrid Peace Conference and the 2008 Annapolis Summit, but in 
neither case was this sufficient to bridge the gaps between Israelis and
 Palestinians, or have the Arabs to do much more with Israel than attend
 the meetings. In 2009, U.S. Middle East envoy George Mitchell pursued 
many of the same normalization steps currently on the table between 
Israel and the Arabs, and President Obama explored Saudi involvement on 
the basis of an Israeli settlement freeze, but again the price for their
 engagement was much greater than what Israel was willing to pay. 
Perhaps most relevant, in 2016 Secretary of State John Kerry made 
exhaustive efforts to have the Arab regimes negotiate with Israel on the
 basis of the principles he had developed during the previous years of 
negotiations with the Israelis and Palestinians, but once again the gaps
 among the parties were too wide to bridge, and the Arab states were 
unwilling to pressure or break with the Palestinians. Even when Kerry 
thought he had persuaded the Arabs to accept certain principles such as 
recognition of Israel as a Jewish state, they were never willing
 to do so in public without Palestinian agreement. The Saudis and other 
key players were not even prepared to show up at an international 
conference – let alone take further steps toward normalization with 
Israel – without at least an Israeli commitment to a negotiating framework the Palestinians would accept (which Israel would not do).
To be sure, the regional situation has 
changed considerably, even since last year, and there are new variables 
in play – including some wildcards that could potentially lead to major 
breaks with the past. One of the most important is President Donald 
Trump, who has made progress on the Israeli-Palestinian issue a foreign 
policy priority, seems determined to try to negotiate “the ultimate 
deal,” and is highly unpredictable. Transactional by nature and 
increasingly frustrated by a lack of progress on other issues on his 
agenda, Trump could try to leverage his strong support for the Arab Gulf
 states to win gestures from them that might advance normalization with 
Israel and Middle East peace. Key Arab leaders in the region are 
inclined to be helpful to Trump, who has wholeheartedly embraced their 
agenda on Iran, Qatar, and Yemen; is ready to do business and make 
armaments deals with no strings attached; and unlike his predecessors 
will not pressure them on democracy and human rights. For this reason, 
Trump may be better placed to succeed with the Arabs where Kerry and 
Obama failed. But Trump’s leverage will still be limited by the Arab 
domestic political factors mentioned above, and even Trump is unlikely 
to make his support for the Gulf states conditional on normalization. In
 fact he already granted that support unconditionally in exchange for 
the warm welcome in Riyadh and the announcement of major arms sales and 
investment agreements – higher priorities for him and more easily 
achievable than Arab normalization with Israel.
Another wildcard is Saudi Crown Prince 
Muhammad bin Salman, the driving force behind Saudi foreign policy. 
While the general Saudi inclination (including that of King Salman) on 
the issue of Israel is one of extreme caution, Prince Muhammad has 
already demonstrated his willingness to take bold steps and risks on 
issues critical to Saudi Arabia’s future. He is shaking up the Saudi 
economic system by diversifying it away from oil, cutting longstanding 
subsidies, raising taxes, and planning to privatize part of Aramco. He 
is likewise shaking up Saudi society by involving more women in 
education and the workforce, reducing the powers of the religious 
police, loosening male guardianship rules, and seeking to boost tourism 
and entertainment in the Kingdom. He has launched a war in Yemen and a 
diplomatic assault on Qatar that show a strong propensity to take major 
risks. Finally, the 31-year-old Crown Prince did not personally 
experience the emergence of the Palestinian tragedy and numerous 
Arab-Israeli wars as did his father’s generation; his formative years 
have instead been dominated by the Saudi rivalry with Iran, the Arab 
Spring, wars in Syria and Yemen, and relative Arab-Israeli peace. With 
the new situation in the Saudi hierarchy, new options with Saudi Arabia 
might conceivably open.
A third important variable concerns the 
future Palestinian leadership and likely upcoming leadership transition.
 Eighty-two-year-old Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is 
not uniformly popular among Arab leaders, some of whom – such as those 
in the UAE – openly and actively support his rivals. As other 
Palestinian actors jockey to succeed Abbas, the Arab states will thus 
consider any steps toward normalization with Israel in the context of 
how it might help or hurt their preferred candidates for succession. If 
Hamas were to take power in the West Bank, for example, Saudi Arabia, 
Egypt, and the UAE might be willing to work even more closely and 
perhaps openly with Israel on efforts to contain and punish the 
organization, especially if Hamas were aligned with Qatar and Iran. On 
the other hand, if a new Palestinian leader preferred by the Gulf Arabs 
emerged, their willingness to work openly with Israel without the 
Palestinians’ blessing might even diminish, lest that cooperation 
undermine the new leader’s legitimacy. The rise of a new Palestinian 
leader whom the Arabs were eager to see in power might encourage Arab 
leaders to cooperate with Israel on measures to improve the daily lives 
of Palestinians, but again only if the Palestinians themselves signed 
off on such cooperation.
Perhaps the most important factor will 
be what takes place in Israel. The current Netanyahu government – in 
which a majority of cabinet ministers favor settlement expansion and 
oppose a two-state solution – seems highly unlikely to take the sort of 
steps presumably required to advance an agreement with Palestinians or 
normalization with the Arabs. Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman speaks 
for many others in the government when he insists
 that Israel “must not accept a situation in which normalization with 
the Arab countries will be held hostage to [resolution of] the 
Palestinian issue.” Thus without political change in Jerusalem it seems 
highly unlikely that even modest steps toward normalization will take 
place. But the current government will not last forever, and a different
 prime minister or coalition could conceivably take steps that affect 
Arab and Palestinian calculations.
An Israeli proposal to go further than 
it has in previous peace negotiations – for example, along the lines of 
the principles that Secretary Kerry articulated in
 his December 2016 speech – would make it easier for the pragmatic Arabs
 to engage with Israel. Indeed, although Kerry’s principles included a 
number of controversial elements such as Arab recognition of Israel as a
 Jewish state, the speech received a positive public
 welcome throughout the Arab world, including from Egypt, Jordan, the 
UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, and even Saudi Arabia. With such principles 
genuinely on the table, the Arabs would have more political cover for 
contact with Israel, and even Saudi Arabia might endorse international 
negotiations on this basis. Nonethless, Arabs’ formalizing security 
cooperation or establishing open political or economic ties with Israel 
would likely be contingent on the conclusion of the 
negotiations with the Palestinians, not on just a reasonable offer. 
Having seen too many rounds of peace talks fail, the Arabs are unlikely 
to take politically costly steps with Israel based merely on an 
agreement to a framework for talks. And no matter how generous the 
Israeli proposals, and no matter how much fault for lack of progress 
might lie with the Palestinians, any expectation that the Arabs will 
blame the Palestinians and side with Israel is misplaced.
In the absence of credible, 
comprehensive peace negotiations, Israeli proposals for partial, 
unilateral, or interim steps would command the Arabs’ attention. For 
example, a unilateral move by a new Israeli government to limit 
settlement activity to the major blocs, end the “legalization” of 
outposts, transfer significant amounts of territory to Palestinian 
control, and genuinely ease freedom of movement would significantly 
improve the atmosphere and increase the prospects for meaningful talks 
with Palestinians and cooperation with Arab states. But even under these
 conditions the Arabs will hesitate to give a public blessing to the 
Israeli moves, let alone make any down payments on normalization, in the
 absence of Palestinian suppport. Israelis might rightly feel that steps
 such as these were unprecedented and politically difficult, but from 
the Arab point of view they would still leave the most controversial 
issues of refugees, occupation, and Jerusalem unaddressed. Palestinians 
in turn would complain that by compensating Israel for partial steps, 
the Arabs were reducing the leverage needed to address the core issues. A
 more realistic objective of an Israeli unilateral or interim initiative
 might be quiet Arab financial and political support designed to make 
that initiative succeed. That more achievable aim would at least improve
 the atmosphere for talks, the lives of Palestinians, and Arab attitudes
 toward Israel, potentially creating the conditions for more substantial
 progress down the road.
Finally, it is worth noting that while 
Arab leaders emphasize how difficult it would be for them to take steps 
toward normalization with Israel in the absence of progress with the 
Palestinians, they also firmly stand by their commitment to the 2002 
Arab Peace Initiative and insist they have made a “strategic choice” for
 peace with Israel. While they continue to maintain that the terms of 
the initiative are not negotiable, they point out that the API was 
written in a way to provide maximum flexibility, and stand by previous 
statements that they can accept adjustments to the 1967 borders as a 
territorial basis for peace. Arab leaders, including in Riyadh, told me 
they stand by the 2013 statement
 made by then-Qatari Prime Minister Hamad bin Jassem al-Thani on behalf 
of the Arab League API Follow-Up Committee that a “comparable and 
mutually agreed minor swap of the land” between Israel and Palestine was
 consistent with the API’s call for a return to 1967 borders.[14]
 They cannot deviate from the official API position that the Golan 
Heights must be returned to Syria, but they realize that it is currently
 not an option, and would likely not let the issue of returning 
territory to the Iran-backed Assad regime stand in the way of a peace 
agreement with Israel. Similarly, on refugees, they insist on the API’s 
requirement of a “just” solution to the refugee problem “to be agreed 
upon in accordance with UN General Assembly Resolution 194,” but 
understand – as evidenced by the words “to be agreed upon” – that Israel
 will never accept a solution that allows large numbers of Palestinian 
refugees to return. The Arabs complain that Israel has not been more 
proactive in putting forward specific ideas for them to react to – 
during the entire Kerry initiative, for example, the Israelis were never
 even willing to look at a map – and that the United States has not 
involved them significantly enough in its efforts to negotiate with 
Israelis and Palestinians. An Israel genuinely willing to negotiate on 
the basis of the API would find Arab partners ready to engage with it.
Conclusion
The prospect of Israel normalizing its 
relations with Arab states is an enticing idea that anyone who cares 
about Israel or the region should want to see realized. Arab strategic 
interests are aligning with Israel’s; some Arab leaders’ attitudes 
toward Israel are changing; and the Arab desire to see an 
Israeli-Palestinian deal remains strong. Arab leaders, moreover, have 
many other pressing issues on their plates, have not been forced to 
decide where their true bottom lines on normalization lie, and will not 
do so unless and until specific ideas are on the table – so those bottom
 lines are worth exploring.
Nevertheless, the vision of Israel 
normalizing its relations with Arab states without the agreement of the 
Palestinians is fanciful, and even modest steps toward normalization 
will require Israel to do much more than many Israelis seem to realize. 
Ultimately, the road to normalization with the Arab states still runs 
through the Palestinian issue, and not the other way around.
Philip Gordon
Source: http://www.inss.org.il/publication/israel-arab-states-illusions-normalization/
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Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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