Riyadh wants declaration on Palestinian state for Israel ties

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FILE - Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman attends the opening of the G20 leaders summit in Buenos Aires, Argentina November 30, 2018. REUTERS/Sergio Moraes/File Photo

(JNS) — Saudi Arabia would suffice with a declared Israeli commitment to the two-state solution in order to normalize ties with Jerusalem as part of a broad agreement including a defense pact with the United States.

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Citing three unnamed sources, Reuters reported that the Saudis are eyeing a deal before the U.S. presidential election in November, and that Israel’s war against Hamas had not entirely derailed diplomatic efforts.

The Saudis froze U.S.-backed normalization negotiations shortly after Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre sparked the war.

According to the report, Riyadh’s primary goals are to shore up its security due to intensifying threats from Iran and forge ahead with diversifying its oil-based economy by attracting foreign investment.

In order to achieve this goal, the Saudi monarchy is willing to accept a political commitment by Jerusalem to the two-state solution. To this end, Riyadh has been urging Washington to apply pressure on Israel to end the war against Hamas and agree to a “political horizon” for establishing a Palestinian state.

While the Saudis have not defined what an acceptable “pathway” to a Palestinian state would entail, the report said one step could be for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to drop his opposition to the Palestinian Authority playing a significant role in post-war Gaza.

Earlier this month, NBC News reported that Netanyahu had rejected a Saudi offer to normalize relations in exchange for a Palestinian state. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken reportedly delivered the proposal to the Israeli leader during his trip to the Jewish state in January.

Blinken had visited several Arab countries, including Saudi Arabia, before arriving in Israel, and officials said that he secured a commitment from Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and four other Arab leaders to help rebuild Gaza after the Israel-Hamas war. The Arab leaders also agreed to support “a new, reformed Palestinian government to secure Gaza.” MBS also agreed to normalize relations with Israel as part of the Gaza reconstruction agreement, but only if a path to Palestinian statehood was provided.

Prior to Hamas’s bloody Oct. 7, 2023 assault on southern Israel, the Biden administration was working on brokering a deal for Riyadh to join the Abraham Accords. The Trump administration-brokered accords normalized relations between Israel and four Arab nations without the requirement of a Palestinian state: The United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan.

In an hour-long September interview with Fox News chief political correspondent Bret Baier—MBS’s first ever interview completely in English and the first with a major American network since 2019—the crown prince said that peace with Jerusalem was “getting closer every day.”

A week and a day before the Oct. 7 massacre, U.S. National Security Council spokesman John Kirby announced that Jerusalem and Riyadh had “hammered out” the contours of a possible American-mediated normalization agreement.

“All sides have hammered out, I think, a basic framework for what, you know, what we might be able to drive at,” he said.

Reuters reported at the time that Saudi Arabia was not conditioning a peace deal with Israel on the establishment of a Palestinian state.

In December, Netanyahu presented three conditions for peace between Israel and the Palestinians: The destruction of Hamas, the demilitarization of Gaza and the deradicalization of Palestinian society.

“These are the three prerequisites for peace between Israel and its Palestinian neighbors in Gaza,” he wrote in an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal.

He argued that because Hamas has promised to repeat Oct. 7 “again and again” the only proportional response was to completely eliminate it.

He warned that “unjustly blaming” Israel for civilian casualties “will only encourage Hamas and other terror organizations around the world to use human shields. To render this cruel and cynical strategy ineffective, the international community must place the blame for these casualties squarely on Hamas. It must recognize that Israel is fighting the bigger battle of the civilized world against barbarism.”

Secondly, Gaza must be demilitarized so that it can’t again become a terror base from which to attack Israel, he said, calling for the establishment of a temporary security zone between Israel and Gaza and an inspection mechanism between Gaza and Egypt.

The Palestinian Authority, he said, could not accomplish this goal.

“The expectation that the Palestinian Authority will demilitarize Gaza is a pipe dream. It currently funds and glorifies terrorism in Judea and Samaria and educates Palestinian children to seek the destruction of Israel,” he wrote. “Not surprisingly it has shown neither the capability nor the will to demilitarize Gaza. It failed to do so before Hamas booted it out of the territory in 2007, and it has failed to do so in the territories under its control today. For the foreseeable future Israel will have to retain overriding security responsibility over Gaza.”

Third, Gaza will have to be deradicalized, he said, noting that the school system will have to be reformed so that children are taught to “cherish life rather than death.” Preaching death to Jews from mosques must cease and Palestinian civil society transformed, he continued.

“Successful deradicalization took place in Germany and Japan after the Allied victory in World War II. Today, both nations are great allies of the United States and promote peace, stability and prosperity in Europe and Asia,” wrote Netanyahu.

Also in December, Israeli President Isaac Herzog added his name to the ranks of officials speaking out against a two-state solution following the war in Gaza.

“What I want to urge is against just saying two-state solution. Why? Because there is an emotional chapter here that must be dealt with. My nation is grieving. My nation is in trauma,” Herzog told the Associated Press in an interview.

“In order to get back to the idea of dividing the land, of negotiating peace or talking to the Palestinians, etc., one has to deal first and foremost with the emotional trauma that we are going through and the need and demand for [a] full sense of security for all people,” he said.


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27 Comments
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NYorker
NYorker
3 months ago

I agree give them back Jordan as their state.

With friends like this who needs enemies
With friends like this who needs enemies
3 months ago

Just remember my fellow Jews a two-state solution is in fact is the final solution.They just changed the name a little.

Ike
Ike
3 months ago

Why do we need their recognition???
Let them keep it in their desert sand castles

TRUMP IN 2024
TRUMP IN 2024
3 months ago

Biden’s home health Oval Office aides are behind this.

Lgb
Lgb
3 months ago

He can keep his “normalization” Arabs are never to be trusted. Never again

Nachum
Nachum
3 months ago

The Saudis are not to be trusted. The USA saved them from the army of Saddam Hussein, in 1991.which had invaded Kuwait in 1990. The Iraqis were poised to strike at the neighboring Saudi oil fields, across the border from Kuwait. The appreciation which the Saudis showed to the USA, is that of late they’ve cut back on the production of oil, resulting in a huge rise in oil prices.

Kvetch
Kvetch
3 months ago

I’m all for declaring two states. The state of the Israeli Jewish country is eternal. The state of hamas is eradicated to irrelevance.

Kvetch
Kvetch
3 months ago

The area of modern-day Saudi Arabia formerly consisted of mainly four distinct historical regions: Hejaz, Najd and parts of Eastern Arabia (Al-Ahsa), and Southern Arabia (‘Asir).[11] The modern Kingdom of Saudi Arabia was founded in 1932 by Abdulaziz bin Abdul Rahman, also known as Ibn Saud in Western countries. Abdulaziz united the four regions into a single state through a series of conquests beginning in 1902 with the capture of Riyadh, the ancestral home of his family. Saudi Arabia has since been an absolute monarchy governed along Islamist lines. Saudi Arabia is sometimes called “the Land of the Two Holy Mosques”, in reference to Al-Masjid al-Haram (in Mecca) and Al-Masjid an-Nabawi (in Medina), the two holiest places in Islam.

Petroleum was discovered on 3 March 1938 and followed up by several other finds in the Eastern Province.[12][13] Saudi Arabia has since become the world’s second largest oil producer (behind the US) and the world’s largest oil exporter, controlling the world’s second largest oil reserves and the sixth largest gas reserves.[14]

Kvetch
Kvetch
3 months ago

“Riyadh wants declaration on Palestinian state for Israel ties”, just letting my Saudi buddies know that our flagship Israeli store of Kvetch branded ties that enhance any man’s suit, will soon be opening its first expansion store in Saudi Arabia, our first Palestinian state for our Israeli top quality ties. PS do not mind the small bumps in material, they are nothing more than compact listening device plants just to er monitor your heart rate pumping well.