Evelyn Gordon , July 22nd 2016
Full article at https://www.commentarymagazine.com/foreign-policy/middle-east/israel/israels-strategy-shift-bears-fruit/
Wednesday’s
announcement that Guinea is resuming ties with Israel almost half a century
after severing them is a nontrivial piece of good news. Granted, Guinea is a
poor and relatively unimportant African country. But it’s 85 percent Muslim,
and few Muslim-majority countries have yet been willing to forge open relations
with Israel; consequently, its decision could encourage others to follow suit.
Guinea was also the first country in Africa to sever relations with Israel
following the 1967 Six-Day War. For both those reasons, its renewal of ties
underscores the degree to which a new Israeli strategy aimed at improving
relations with the non-Western world has begun bearing fruit.
The
Guinea announcement comes on the heels of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s
successful trip to Africa earlier this month. Highlights of that trip included
announcements by both Kenya and Ethiopia–two of Israel’s closest African
allies–that they would push for Israel to receive observer status at the
African Union, as well as Tanzania’s announcement that it planned to open an
embassy in Israel, 21 years after renewing relations.
Israeli
media outlets have also reported that
officials from three other Muslim-majority African countries that don’t have
relations with Israel–Mali, Chad, and Somalia–recently paid secret visits,
indicating that the prospect of other Muslim countries following Guinea’s lead
is far from inconceivable. Indeed, just last week, Foreign Ministry Director
General Dore Gold visited Chad
for a meeting with its president. This prospect is made more plausible by the
warming of Israel’s relations with key Arab states. As several African leaders
noted during Netanyahu’s trip, there’s little point in African countries
continuing to give Israel the cold shoulder when some of the very Arab countries
that originally pushed them to do so now have either overt or covert relations
with it.
There
are three reasons why Israel ascribes such importance to its warming ties with
Africa, and both have more to do with the long term than the short term.
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The first is the need to
diversify its trading partners. Currently, about a third of Israel’s exports go
to Europe. But the combination of Europe’s slowing economy and its growing
hostility to Israel make this heavy reliance on Europe a potential threat to
Israel’s economic future. Africa is the world’s poorest continent, but it’s
experiencing rapid economic growth, and many of Israel’s fields of expertise
fit well with Africa’s needs, including agricultural technology, water
conservation, and counterterrorism. Thus by expanding and improving its
diplomatic relations with African countries, Israel hopes to eventually expand
its trade relations as well.
-
The second, as Netanyahu said
during his Africa trip, is the hope of ending the automatic majority against
Israel in international forums. As he readily acknowledged, this could well
take decades; long-entrenched voting patterns don’t change overnight.
Nevertheless, change is far from impossible: See, for instance, the 2014
Security Council vote on setting a deadline for Palestinian statehood, which
was defeated because the Palestinians failed to muster the requisite nine
votes. Two of the five crucial abstentions came
from Africa (Rwanda and Nigeria).
The
improvement stems partly from Israel’s
longstanding policy of proffering aid even to countries it has no relations
with, which sometimes bears belated fruit. For instance, Israeli officials said one factor in
Guinea’s decision to renew relations was the medical aid Israel gave it during
the Ebola crisis two years ago. A salient example from Asia, another continent
with which Israel’s ties have recently blossomed, is Singapore. Singapore asked
Israel to train its army in the mid-1960s, before the two countries even
established relations, and then concealed that fact for decades. But last month,
as Elliott Abrams noted,
Singapore joined forces with India and Rwanda–the third country in the club of
Israel’s closest African allies–to help Israel gain the Non-Aligned votes it
needed to win the chairmanship of a key UN committee.
- The
third reason for Israel’s declining isolation, however, is a deliberate
decision by successive Netanyahu governments that the country could not afford,
either economically or diplomatically, to keep focusing almost exclusively on
the West while largely ignoring the rest of the world.
This
constituted a major shift in Israel’s strategy, and it stemmed from a simple
realization: Relations with Europe are inevitably being frayed by the fact that
what the EU seems to want most from Israel is something beyond Israel’s power
to provide. Namely, a peace deal with people who have consistently refused
every Israeli offer and are currently refusing even to negotiate with it.
The
restoration of relations with Guinea is yet another sign that this strategy is
starting to pay off. And that’s very good news for Israel.
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