‘Bahrain Natural Choice To Hold Mideast Economic Meeting’- US Rabbi

May 20, 2019

The Jerusalem Post
By Herb Keinon
May 20, 2019

US rabbi who serves as advisor to Bahrain King says Gulf state a leader in warming ties with Israel’s.

Rabbi Marc Schneier with King Hamad of Bahrain

It is only natural that the US administration selected Bahrain as the site of an “economic workshop” next month that will constitute the first step in promoting US President Donald Trump’s “deal of the century,” said US Rabbi Marc Schneier, a “special adviser” to the Bahraini king.

“I don’t think that anyone deserves this more, or is more worthy of this distinction, then the king of Bahrain, who has consistently led the effort in warming relations between Israel and the Gulf,” said Schneier, who visits the Gulf state five or six times each year. In December, Bahrain’s King Hamad Bin Isa Al Khalifa named him as a special adviser to his Global Center for Peaceful Coexistence.

The aim of the “economic workshop” scheduled for June 25-26 is to “galvanize support for potential economic investments and initiatives that could be made possible by a peace agreement,” the White House said Sunday when announcing the meeting. It is expected to be attended by finance ministers and business leaders from around the world in an effort to secure financial commitments to back the economic component of a Mideast peace deal.

Schneier, who last year predicted that Bahrain would be the first Persian Gulf state that will establish ties with Israel, ticked off a number of steps Hamad has taken over the last eight years that have set Bahrain apart regarding attitudes toward Israel.

These include being the first Gulf leader to speak publicly against Iran in 2011; taking the lead in 2013 in getting the Gulf Cooperation Council to designate Hezbollah a terrorist organization; sending an interfaith groups to Jerusalem in December of 2017 just two weeks after US President Donald Trump recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital; and statements that he and his foreign minister have issued over the last year supporting some of Israel’s defensive actions.

It is not a question of Hamad being a participant in the Gulf countries’ warming relations with Israel, Schneier said, “He is very much leading this process.”

Schneier, rabbi of the Hampton Synagogue in New York who spends a good deal of time in Persian Gulf countries as head of an organization promoting Jewish-Islamic ties called the Foundation for Ethnic Understanding, said Bahrain stands to benefit on a number of different levels by hosting this meeting.

First, he said, it will position Bahrain to be the first Gulf country to establish ties with Israel. Secondly, he said, it will strengthen the country’s relationship with the US – not only with the Trump administration, but also with Congress and the American people. And finally, he said, Hamad has expressed to him in the past his desire in developing economic ties with Israel.

Schneier quoted Hamad as telling him in 2016, “Our only hope for a strong moderate Arab voice in the Gulf is a strong Israel.”

One major question mark hovering over holding the workshop in Bahrain is whether the Qataris, whom Bahrain – along with the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Egypt – are boycotting, will attend. Qatar is one of the Palestinians’ main financial supporters.

“Hopefully the summit will transcend the political and ideological difference between the two countries,” he said, noting that it is the US, and not Bahrain, who will be inviting the participants to the conference.

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