En viktig roll i detta spelar Fatah-dissidenten Mohammed Dahlan, som av många uppfattas som en realistisk efterträdare till den åldrade och sjuke Abbas. Dahlan är idag säkerhetsrådgivare till UAE:s härskare och förespråkar en väst- och Israelvänlig politik, som givetvis hatas av de gamla Sovjetutbildade terrorister som idag styr pseudostaten "Palestina". Men i den förvirrade arabiska politiken är det tyvärr sällan duglighet eller ens realism som styr....
En viktig orsak till Dahlans populäritet i många s k moderata arabstater är naturligtvis hans vilja att aktivt bekämpa det destruktiva inflytandet från Iran och de Muslimska Brödraskapsstyrda Qatar och Turkiet. De regimerna är i dagsläget de största hindren för fred och avspänning i regionen.
Så länge Saudiarabien och dess allierade undviker att öppet samarbeta med Israel lär vi dock inte få se något verkligt genombrott i den s k fredsprocessen i Mellanöstern.
The United Arab Emirates (UAE) is 
gradually obtaining support in its endeavours to normalise relations 
with Israel, with economic and security interests alleged to be behind 
the rapprochement.
The UAE has been in the process of normalising its relations with Israel
 for several years, and Abu Dhabi’s allies are now following their 
sponsor.The Southern Transitional Council (STC), the Yemeni secessionist
 movement sponsored by the UAE, has recently shown a willingness to establish relations with Israel,
 with which it is currently in secret talks. The same has been said 
for Khalifa Haftar, head of the Libyan National Army, who is seeking new
 support after successive setbacks against Fayez Al-Sarraj’s 
Turkish-backed Government of National Accord (GNA).
The communication between Haftar and Tel-Aviv has been ongoing for two years, as Intelligence Online has
 previously reported. Palestinians close to Mohammed Dahlan, the chief 
security adviser to Abu Dhabi’s Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Zayed 
Al-Nahyan, are also committed to normalising relations with Israel.These
 understandings come as Abu Dhabi has been publicising its ties with Israel in the wake of the COVID-19 crisis. Highly unusually, planes from the Emirati airline Etihad’s fleet landed on the tarmac at Ben-Gurion Airport
 on 20 May and 9 June, loaded with humanitarian aid for the West Bank. 
However the Palestinian Authority (PA) refused the medical aid, claiming
 it had not been party to coordination on the delivery, which was 
conducted exclusively with Israel.Behind this display, Abu Dhabi is 
looking to take advantage of the tacit recognition of Israel to secure 
new cybersecurity contracts, just as the agreement on 20 June was aimed 
at facilitating joint research in the context of the current epidemic.
Previous
 contracts concluded in 2019 are understood to have totalled more than 
$4 billion. The normalisation also has more conventional security 
motivations, with Israel and the UAE hoping to jointly form a bloc 
against Iran.

 


 
 
   















 
 
 
 
 
