Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says Saudi Arabia now sees Tel
Aviv "as an ally rather as an enemy" as he claims "a great shift taking
place" in the Arab policy toward the Palestinian issue.
“Saudi
Arabia recognizes that Israel is an ally rather than an enemy because
of the two principle threats that threaten them, Iran and Daesh," he
told CNN’s Fareed Zakaria on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum
in Davos Friday.
Both Saudi Arabia and Israel are fiercely
opposed to a nuclear accord between Iran and the West which came into
force recently. They are worried the agreement could boost Iran's role
in the region.
Last week, The Wall Street Journal reported that
Israel was actively seeking to strengthen ties with Arab powers in the
wake of the nuclear deal with Iran.
Daesh ideology is rooted in
Wahhabism which is widely promoted by Saudi clerics and tolerated by
the kingdom's rulers. Both Saudi Arabia and Israel support Takfiri
groups fighting in Syria. Meanwhile, there is no known case of a Daesh
attack on either Saudi or Israeli targets.
Netanyahu also said
"there is a great shift taking place" in the Saudi-led policy toward the
Palestinian issue, citing Israel's "relationships" with unknown Arab
states.
"By nurturing these relationships that are taking place
now with the Arab world, that could actually help us resolve the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and we’re actually working towards that
end,” he said.
Netanyahu’s overtures to Saudi Arabia and its
allies come in the midst of international outcry after Tel Aviv declared
154 hectares (380 acres) of Palestinian territory in the Jordan Valley
as “state lands.”
Yuval Steinitz, Israel’s minister for
national infrastructure, energy, and water, returned recently from an
energy conference in the UAE, where Tel Aviv recently established a
diplomatic mission. Israel’s Channel 2 suggested that the real aim of
the trip may have been for the two sides to covertly conduct strategy
meetings.
In recent months, Egypt returned its ambassador to
Tel Aviv while a group of Jordanian pilots paid a “working visit” to
Israel and trained closely with their Israeli counterparts during
US-sponsored military exercises.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan also recently expressed an interest in easing up tensions with
Israel after reaching an agreement to restore relations last month.
Sudan is also said to be considering normalizing ties with Israel.
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