‘Huge Drama:’ Israelis Excited Over Netanyahu Meeting in Saudi Arabia

Saudi officials confirm secret meeting, sparking new hopes of peace

By Aryeh Savir | | Topics: Saudi Arabia
Photo: Menahem Kahana/POOL

Israeli reporters with an intimate knowledge of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s close ties with the Arab world defined his publicized meeting with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo as a “huge drama” that signifies a serious development in the ties between the two countries.

The meeting took place late Sunday night at the Saudi port city of Neom, and Mossad chief Yossi Cohen was present.

Cohen is a key player in Israel’s budding ties with the Arab Gulf states.

An Israeli official confirmed the report, the first time the state’s censorship has allowed the publication of such a high-profile meeting.

A senior Saudi official confirmed in an interview with the Wall Street Journal that Netanyahu met with bin Salman. According to the source, the two leaders discussed the Iranian threat and the normalization of ties between their two countries.

The Trump administration, which has worked hard on the peace agreements between Israel and the Arab states, and in particular on the agreement between Israel and Saudi Arabia, wants to record another achievement before President Donald Trump ends his term.

Senior Israeli commentator Shimrit Meir said that the publication of Netanyahu’s trip to Saudi Arabia “is the dramatic event here,” noting that the Saudi’s are aware that they must be “more prepared” for the expected administration change in Washington in January.

Reporter Barak Ravid said that “sometimes you have to say the obvious: this is a huge drama! There have been similar meetings in the past, but they have been under severe censorship.”

Pointing out that the Israelis, Americans and most of all, the Saudis knew the meeting would be publicized, he said it was “significant diplomatic progress, a signal to Iran and a message to the Biden administration.”

Ravid added that he has been following Netanyahu’s covert diplomatic missions since 2012, and recently “things ripened and burst out like from a volcanic crater” and “Netanyahu deserves a lot of credit for that.”

Saudi Arabia appears to be on the way to joining the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain who signed a historic peace agreement with Israel at the White House on September 15, the first agreement to be signed between Israel and an Arab country in 25 years.

Announced on August 13, the Abraham Accords is the first between a Gulf state and Israel and is expected to lead to similar agreements with other Arab countries, possibly Oman and the rest of the Sunni Gulf states.

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