Israel, Iran and the Middle East: Good and evil before our eyes - opinion
The Negev Summit — as a continuation of the Abraham Accords — showed us how much peace in the region is possible. It should not be squandered.
It’s a sad fact of life that it’s harder to sell peace and tolerance in our world than terror, death and destruction, especially in the global press.
The war in Ukraine has dominated the headlines over the past weeks. Now, the terrible new wave of terror that has killed innocent victims in Hadera, Beersheba and Bnei Brak has changed the focus in the Middle East. In my country, sadly, bad behavior at Hollywood’s Oscars has even overshadowed the killings in Israel.
So, you would have to really hunt to find any news in America, of the meetings that just took place in the Negev Desert, the Negev Summit.
That is a shame because they are significant and historic. Last week, for those who missed it, the foreign ministers of Bahrain, Egypt, Morocco, the UAE, the United States and Israel came together in an extraordinary summit at Sde Boker, in the Negev Desert of Israel.
If you ever wanted to see the black-and-white contrast between the bridge builders of peace in our world and those who want to destroy, it all took place right there in front of our eyes.
This is the clash our world is facing: The clash between bridge builders and those who use terror and fear in order to divide us for their own warped goals. There is something else that is important, and it should not be missed.
All of this came about for two reasons. The fear of Iran’s growing influence in the region — and its potential access to nuclear weapons, if the new deal being pushed by the United States and Europe comes about — prompted both Jews and Sunnis to join forces to confront the radical Shiite threat. Also, a deep disappointment with America’s semi-isolationist policies is driving moderate Arab leaders to discern that their only truly trustworthy ally is their small, but mighty neighbor — Israel.
This is regrettable. Without the economic and strategic might of the oil-rich Kingdom, and without the entity that represents the Palestinian people, any Arab-Israeli peace accord is incomplete.