The Jerusalem Post
By Seth Frantzman
December 15, 2020
There is a need for Israel to move on the Palestinian issue. Most Gulf countries expect to see some changes and an opening by Israel to the Palestinians.
Rabbi Marc Schneier is an adviser to leaders in the Gulf and believes that more peace deals will come in the future. In an interview last week in Dubai, the rabbi, who has worked on peace and coexistence in the region for many years, spoke about his view of what the future looks like.
Schneier is the president of the Foundation for Ethnic Understanding. We sat the Fairmont at the Palm, an exquisite area of Dubai. “For 12 years I’ve been working on this. As someone who paved the way, I see this as two down and four to go in the Gulf. I won’t be content until I see Qataris, Saudis, Omanis and Kuwaitis join as well. Then you will see a transformation,” he says.
Qatar is preparing for the World Cup. He thinks Qatar and Doha are a natural fit for Israel and “Qataris are very excited about welcoming Israelis for the World Cup.” He has worked on addressing the needs of kosher cuisine in Doha. “In regard the question about Israeli guests coming to watch the game, the Qataris have already said that they will be allowed to do so but I believe that by November 2022 (the start of the World Cup), we will already see relations between the UAE and Israel.” That is how confident the rabbi is.
“At the same time I think people who analyze the Gulf don’t listen and choose not to listen and that there is a pronouncement coming from Saudi Arabia and Qatar that until the Palestinian issue is addressed, not necessarily resolved, they will not recognize Israel.” He predicts that President-elect Joe Biden will bring a policy that “is more in concert with the Saudis and Qataris than Trump. He feels the same way about the Palestinians. I believe he can bring this baby home in terms of getting Qataris and Saudis on board,” he says.
There is a need for Israel to move on the Palestinian issue. Most Gulf countries expect to see some changes and an opening by Israel to the Palestinians. He also wants to see the Gulf crisis between Qatar and Saudi Arabia resolved. “I do commend Jared Kushner for his last attempt to re-unite the Gulf Cooperation Council. This conflict with Qatar is having adverse impact on Qatar normalizing relations.”
Biden could move things forward, he thinks. “I believe that President-elect Biden will actually move this forward at a quicker pace because the Saudis have been very clear that in order to come closer to Israel, they need to see some movement on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.” In contrast to the focus on the UAE in recent weeks, the rabbi points to Qatar as a country that has worked with Israel in the past. “I take pride in my unique position, people wondered how could I have an intimate relationship with King of Bahrain and Emir of Qatar; I’m not pro-either side, I’m pro-Gulf.”
He calls Qatar the “Switzerland” of the Gulf. It is closer to Turkey and Iran however than other Gulf states would like. “Qatar won’t turn down Turkey and Iran. Israel can’t continue in a state of conflict with Iran and Turkey, so Israel can say it has the capacity to handle Iran and Turkey; but Qatar could be an effective channel, never underestimate the Qataris, they are very sharp,” he says.
He believes that there could be change in Iran and Turkey in terms of their negative view of Israel. “Iran and turkey can change; I’m not suggesting it will happen immediately but you need those channels. The Emir of Qatar has said to me, ‘rabbi, Qatar, Israel and Singapore, countries that fly above their weight’ and you don’t underestimate Qatar, it’s small and influential.”
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