The Prague Post - With Israel ties on the table, UAE offers Saudis an example

EUR -
AED 4.328618
AFN 81.316193
ALL 96.423231
AMD 450.880628
ANG 2.109981
AOA 1080.679385
ARS 1737.380476
AUD 1.781036
AWG 1.657259
AZN 2.002246
BAM 1.948179
BBD 2.374721
BDT 143.492961
BGN 1.9556
BHD 0.444385
BIF 3467.721807
BMD 1.178495
BND 1.508008
BOB 8.1472
BRL 6.245666
BSD 1.179093
BTN 103.828296
BWP 16.772533
BYN 3.994193
BYR 23098.503797
BZD 2.371344
CAD 1.626258
CDF 3328.069946
CHF 0.933955
CLF 0.028746
CLP 1127.713725
CNY 8.383102
CNH 8.378682
COP 4588.458854
CRC 594.078668
CUC 1.178495
CUP 31.23012
CVE 110.631254
CZK 24.285128
DJF 209.442546
DKK 7.463174
DOP 73.361213
DZD 152.500812
EGP 56.800048
ERN 17.677426
ETB 170.106938
FJD 2.647784
FKP 0.862633
GBP 0.8695
GEL 3.179877
GGP 0.862633
GHS 14.460173
GIP 0.862633
GMD 87.208724
GNF 10206.945481
GTQ 9.031709
GYD 246.638366
HKD 9.165628
HNL 30.900259
HRK 7.533054
HTG 154.27717
HUF 389.292627
IDR 19536.030984
ILS 3.942202
IMP 0.862633
INR 103.897719
IQD 1544.564694
IRR 49570.460957
ISK 143.198739
JEP 0.862633
JMD 189.189947
JOD 0.835584
JPY 174.321835
KES 152.616011
KGS 103.059543
KHR 4722.229894
KMF 492.610662
KPW 1060.624167
KRW 1635.75096
KWD 0.359771
KYD 0.982565
KZT 637.887488
LAK 25528.357579
LBP 105585.976254
LKR 356.166786
LRD 208.696301
LSL 20.434155
LTL 3.479789
LVL 0.71286
LYD 6.35829
MAD 10.586668
MDL 19.495903
MGA 5181.77447
MKD 61.291288
MMK 2474.144653
MNT 4239.855139
MOP 9.445572
MRU 47.079838
MUR 53.338918
MVR 18.030377
MWK 2044.52846
MXN 21.61937
MYR 4.945
MZN 75.318107
NAD 20.434155
NGN 1761.237057
NIO 43.390454
NOK 11.648905
NPR 166.124876
NZD 2.003719
OMR 0.453131
PAB 1.179098
PEN 4.098286
PGK 5.002517
PHP 67.380501
PKR 334.588593
PLN 4.259551
PYG 8395.231687
QAR 4.2994
RON 5.067888
RSD 117.164745
RUB 98.111791
RWF 1709.029308
SAR 4.4201
SBD 9.683771
SCR 17.938499
SDG 708.85204
SEK 11.030809
SGD 1.511149
SHP 0.926112
SLE 27.470674
SLL 24712.457143
SOS 673.8669
SRD 44.943678
STD 24392.469025
STN 24.40464
SVC 10.316819
SYP 15322.547604
SZL 20.427182
THB 37.632907
TJS 11.053901
TMT 4.136518
TND 3.412566
TOP 2.76015
TRY 48.673148
TTD 7.998745
TWD 35.494505
TZS 2916.77472
UAH 48.653209
UGX 4128.849219
USD 1.178495
UYU 47.155542
UZS 14448.482007
VES 192.616591
VND 31094.592994
VUV 139.635259
WST 3.120069
XAF 653.403858
XAG 0.028206
XAU 0.000324
XCD 3.184942
XCG 2.124997
XDR 0.812985
XOF 653.417666
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.308271
ZAR 20.434822
ZMK 10607.871329
ZMW 27.785547
ZWL 379.474939
  • CMSC

    -0.1150

    24.305

    -0.47%

  • RIO

    -1.0350

    61.955

    -1.67%

  • SCS

    0.1850

    16.915

    +1.09%

  • BCC

    0.6250

    81.085

    +0.77%

  • BTI

    -0.9600

    55.07

    -1.74%

  • GSK

    -0.1050

    40.255

    -0.26%

  • AZN

    -0.7550

    76.935

    -0.98%

  • NGG

    -0.8600

    70.29

    -1.22%

  • BP

    0.1550

    34.455

    +0.45%

  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    15.32

    +0.46%

  • JRI

    0.0270

    13.877

    +0.19%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    24.49

    -0.12%

  • VOD

    -0.2050

    11.455

    -1.79%

  • BCE

    -0.2250

    23.265

    -0.97%

  • RELX

    0.6300

    47.72

    +1.32%

  • RBGPF

    -0.6700

    76.6

    -0.87%

With Israel ties on the table, UAE offers Saudis an example
With Israel ties on the table, UAE offers Saudis an example / Photo: - - AFP/File

With Israel ties on the table, UAE offers Saudis an example

US President Donald Trump's Gulf tour this week will take him to Saudi Arabia, which he would like see recognise Israel, and the neighbouring UAE which has benefitted from Israeli ties but also paid a price.

Text size:

During his first term, Trump oversaw a series of normalisation deals between close ally Israel and several Arab countries, stunning public opinion in the Arab world and breaking with the long-held convention that a just resolution to the plight of Palestinians must precede relations with Israel.

Nearly five years since the UAE joined the US-brokered Abraham Accords, along with Gulf neighbour Bahrain and North African kingdom Morocco, these relations have endured despite outrage in the region over the devastating Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.

"If the Gaza war did not put an end to that, nothing will," said Emirati analyst Abdulkhaleq Abdulla.

While recognising Israel brought economic and strategic windfalls for the UAE, its standing in the Middle East took a hit, experts said.

And although the UAE and Saudi Arabia are both oil-rich Gulf states, reputational risks at home and across the Arab and Muslim worlds weigh heavier on Riyadh as Trump seeks to persuade it to take the epochal step of normalising ties with Israel.

- Trade boost -

The Abraham Accords of 2020 gave the UAE "significant political capital in Washington", said Karim Bitar, a lecturer in Middle Eastern studies at Paris's Sciences Po university.

But since the Gaza war began in October 2023, "what the UAE won in terms of leverage in the United States... it lost in the Arab world" where ties with Israel have become "extraordinarily unpopular", Bitar added.

Trade has grown consistently, rising 43 percent last year to $3.24 billion, said Israel's consul general in Dubai, Liron Zaslansky, noting that the figure excludes software and services.

Nearly 600 Israeli companies have set up in the UAE, while around one million Israeli tourists visited the country in 2024, Zaslansky told AFP.

The number of Emirati tourists in Israel is "much lower," according to Zaslansky, "especially since October 7", when Hamas's 2023 attack started the war.

Cooperation in technology and intelligence sharing have helped the UAE counter the influence of regional rivals like Iran -- Israel's sworn enemy -- or Islamist movements that are deemed a threat.

The biggest win for the UAE was the special attention and support of the United States, Israel's staunch ally.

The UAE was made a major US defence partner last year, even though the sale of cutting-edge weaponry announced in the wake of the Abraham Accords, including 50 F-35 stealth fighters, has never been finalised.

Today, the Emiratis are "more interested in AI and technology" said Abdulla, topics that are expected to be central to Trump's stop in Abu Dhabi.

- 'Think twice' -

Riyadh is keenly aware that recognising Israel has affected the UAE's reputation in the Arab world, where many remain hostile to normalisation.

A public opinion poll published by US think tank the Arab Center Washington DC in January 2024, about three months into the Gaza war, suggested that a majority of Saudis opposed recognising Israel.

In a similar survey in 2022, only 38 percent expressed an objection.

The UAE, accused of "treason" by the Palestinians at the time, claimed that in return for normalisation it had obtained an Israeli pledge to freeze plans to annex the occupied West Bank.

However Israel's actions during the Gaza war have demonstrated the UAE's limited influence over its new ally.

Abu Dhabi says normalisation has helped it get aid into Gaza throughout the war, and according to Abdulla, nearly all Emiraties "trust the government" to promote national interests even as the vast majority of Arabs, including in the UAE, "hate what Israel is doing in Gaza".

Before the war, Saudi Arabia had engaged in preliminary discussions with Washington about establishing ties with Israel in exchange for a security agreement and support for a civilian nuclear programme.

But the kingdom has since clarified its position, saying it would not agree to normalisation without a Palestinian state.

Sanam Vakil of the Chatham House think tank said the Abraham Accords are "a case study for Saudi Arabia", showing benefits in trade, investment and US ties but "limitations" on the Palestinian issue and people-to-people links.

Unlike Saudi Arabia, the vast majority of people in the UAE are foreigners, minimising the risk of destabilisation through popular discontent.

Saudi Arabia's status as the custodian of Islam's holiest sites also raises the stakes and "makes normalisation far more politically sensitive," said Bitar.

"I think Saudi Arabia will probably think twice before following the path of the UAE."

T.Musil--TPP