Saudi-Israel normalization ‘impossible’ if Palestinian state is prerequisite: Pompeo

Former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has ruled out the possibility of a normalization deal between Saudi Arabia and the Israeli regime if such an agreement required the creation of an independent Palestinian state with the occupied al-Quds as its capital.

Pompeo made the comment in an interview with Israel’s Jerusalem Post newspaper on Wednesday after Saudi Arabia’s Ambassador to Palestine Nayef bin Bandar al-Sudairi made an official visit to the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah.

During the visit, Sudairi underlined that creating a Palestinian state with the occupied al-Quds as its capital would be the “central point” of any prospective agreement with the illegal entity.

“It is impossible to imagine a two-state solution with the current Palestinian leadership,” Pompeo said, accusing the Palestinian Authority (PA) of “underwriting terrorism, taking money from Iran, paying citizens to kill Israelis,” without providing evidence for his claims. 

The former US diplomat added, “It is very difficult to imagine how one would strike a deal with the very leaders that have rejected every reasonable offer with which they have been presented.”

Stressing that every US president, whether Democratic or Republican, would support a normalization agreement, Pompeo said it is in the US’s interest to have security relations between the United States and Saudi Arabia and between Israel and Saudi Arabia.

Sudairi, who is also the Saudi ambassador to Jordan, was appointed last month as the kingdom’s non-resident ambassador to Palestine and consul general in al-Quds.

The Israeli regime claims occupied al-Quds as its own capital, a status recognized by the United States under then-president Donald Trump in 2017 but not by other world countries. Israeli authorities bar Palestinian diplomatic activity in the city.

The Saudi ambassador’s appointment came amid reports that the Persian Gulf kingdom is considering the prospect of establishing formal diplomatic relations with Israel under US pressure.

In late July, the administration of US President Joe Biden announced that a deal for Israel and Saudi Arabia to normalize relations may be on the horizon following National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan’s talks with Saudi officials in Jeddah.

In order to sign a deal with Israel, Riyadh publicly asked Tel Aviv to implement the 2002 so-called Arab Peace Initiative, which conditions normalizing ties with Israel on the establishment of an independent, sovereign Palestinian state within the 1967 borders.

However, members of the far-right Israeli regime, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, say they will not make any concession to the Palestinians as part of a potential deal for normalization of relations with Saudi Arabia.

Washington’s efforts to add Saudi Arabia to the list of Arab countries that have signed the Abraham Accords come at a critical time when Biden is seeking re-election and Washington has failed to pull the kingdom farther from China’s orbit and hamper Beijing’s efforts to expand its influence in West Asia.

The UAE, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco signed US-brokered normalization agreements with Israel in 2020 under former hawkish President Donald Trump, drawing condemnations from Palestinians who censured the deals as “a stab in the back of the Palestinian cause and the Palestinian people.” 

Report: Kuwait withdraws forces from Saudi Arabia’s border regions with Yemen


Kuwait’s security contingent poses for a picture at King Abdulaziz Air Base in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, on January 13, 2022. (File photo by Saudi Press Agency)

Kuwait, which is part of a Saudi-led military coalition waging a military onslaught and enforcing a tight blockade against Yemen, has reportedly withdrawn forces from areas on the southern border of Saudi Arabia with the war-torn Arab country.

On Thursday, sources close to the Saudi-backed and Aden-based Presidential Leadership Council (PLC) circulated video clips on social media platforms, showing the pullout of Kuwaiti troops from the regions and their return to their homeland.

The development comes more than eight years after Kuwait deployed its forces along Saudi Arabia’s border with Yemen after Riyadh initiated a brutal war of aggression against its southern neighbor in March 2015.

The reasons for the pullout of Kuwaiti forces are unclear, and it is unknown whether it is related to any disputes within the Riyadh-led alliance.

 

Some observers have associated the move with growing indications that Yemeni fighters would launch retaliatory operations and target Kuwaiti troops just like the recent attack on Bahraini forces stationed on the Saudi border with Yemen.

Two Bahraini servicemen in Saudi Arabia were confirmed dead in Monday’s drone attack before a third soldier succumbed to his injuries on Wednesday, the Bahrain Defense Force said.

The attack took place as the soldiers were patrolling Saudi Arabia’s southern border with Yemen.

Saudi Arabia launched the war of aggression against Yemen in March 2015, enlisting the assistance of some of its regional allies, including the United Arab Emirates, as well as massive shipments of advanced weaponry from the US and Western Europe.

The Western governments extended their political and logistical support to Riyadh in their failed bid to restore power in Yemen to the former Saudi-installed government.

The former Yemeni government’s president, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, resigned in late 2014 and later fled to Riyadh amid a political conflict with Ansarullah resistance movement.

The movement has been running Yemen’s affairs in the absence of a functioning administration.

The war further led to the killing of tens of thousands of Yemenis and turned the entire nation into the scene of the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

Group: Israel has detained over 135,000 Palestinians since 2000

A prisoner advocacy group has said that the Israeli regime has detained more than 135,000 Palestinians since the outbreak of Al-Aqsa Intifada in September 2000.

The Detainees’ and Ex-Detainees’ Affairs Commission said in a report on Wednesday that the Israeli regime has persisted in detaining Palestinians from all segments of the society.

It further noted that almost 21,000 children and more than 2,600 girls and women had been among those detained by Israeli forces during that span of time. Four women had to give birth in prison under very difficult conditions.

The commission added that of the members of the Palestinian parliament, a number of ministers and hundreds of academics, journalists, and staff from civil society and international organizations had been arrested.

It also pointed out that half of the members of the Palestinian parliament were detained and several ministers, as well as hundreds of academics, journalists and national and international NGO workers.

The report recorded a remarkable increase in administrative detentions, citing more than 32,000 such detention orders since 2000.

Elsewhere in the report, the commission said that there are around 5,200 Palestinian prisoners currently held by Israel.

The number includes 38 women, around 170 children, more than 1,250 administrative detainees, and 700 sick prisoners suffering from various health issues, including 24 with cancer.

There are thousands of Palestinians held in Israeli jails. Human rights organizations say Israel violates all the rights and freedoms granted to prisoners by the Fourth Geneva Convention.

Palestinian prisoners are held for lengthy periods without being charged, tried, or convicted, which is in sheer violation of human rights. Advocacy groups describe Israel’s use of detention as a “bankrupt tactic” and have long called on Israel to end its use.

According to the Palestine Detainees Studies Center, about 60% of the Palestinian prisoners detained in Israeli jails suffer from chronic diseases, a number of whom died in detention or after being released due to the severity of their cases.

UN says Israel using lethal weaponry

In a recent speech before the UN Security Council, the UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, Tor Wennesland, also confirmed that Israel is holding 1,264 Palestinians in administrative detention. 

He further expressed grave concern over “the intensification of violence in the Occupied West Bank and Israel – at levels not seen in decades – and the use of increasingly lethal weaponry, including in densely populated areas.”

 “Israeli security forces carried out 1,042 search-and-arrest operations in the occupied West Bank, resulting in 1,504 Palestinians arrested, including 88 children.”

During the reporting period, extending from 15 July to 19 September, Israeli security forces killed 68 Palestinians, including 18 children, during demonstrations, clashes, security operations, attacks or alleged attacks against Israelis, and other incidents.

The UN envoy confirmed that a total of 2,830 Palestinians, including 30 women and 559 children, were injured, including 271 by live ammunition and 2,119 by tear gas inhalation.

Wennesland said settlements further entrench the occupation, fuel violence, impede Palestinian access to their land and resources and systematically erode the viability of a Palestinian State as part of a two-state solution.

A human rights group says it has documented several cases of Israeli soldiers gunning Palestinians across the occupied territories and peaceful Palestinian protesters along the besieged Gaza Strip. Palestinians stress that such cases must be taken to international courts and Israelis must be held accountable for their atrocities.

China, Saudi Arabia to hold joint naval drill in October

The drills, dubbed “Blue Sword 2023,” will take place in China’s southern province of Guangdong in October, Beijing said, according to Al-Arabiya.

“This joint training focuses on overseas maritime counter-terrorism operations, conducting exercises on sniper tactics, boat driving, helicopter landing, and joint rescue,” defense ministry spokesperson Wu Qian told a press briefing.

The two countries previously held joint naval drills in 2019, according to the official Saudi Press Agency.

They are “aiming to deepen practical and friendly cooperation between the two militaries and improve the level of practical training for the troops,” Wu said.

The exercises come as Beijing forges deeper ties with Riyadh and plays peacemaker in the Middle East.

MNA

Ghalibaf stresses expanding Iran ties with African nations

Mohammad Bagheri Ghalibaf made the remarks in a meeting with a group of political and cultural activists and a number of South African parliamentarians in Johannesburg on Thursday.

“We believe that the importance of Africa, especially South Africa, is not less than BRICS. One of the goals of BRICS is to create coordination to use these opportunities,” Ghalibaf said.

The speaker of the Iranian parliament also held separate meetings with his counterparts in South Africa, where he arrived on Wednesday to attend the BRICS Parliamentary Forum in Johannesburg.

He held separate meetings with the parliament speakers of Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, and Namibia.

In the different meetings, Ghalibaf stressed that developing bilateral and regional relations among neighboring countries, especially in the Persian Gulf region, also among Islamic countries, and influencing international bodies, especially BRICS, in various political and economic fields matter a lot.

Ghalibaf stresses expanding Iran ties with African nations

In the meeting with the Iranian speaker, the speaker of the UAE Federal National Council (FNC) Saqr Ghobash expressed happiness with the upcoming visit of the Iranian counterpart to his country.

“The return of the ambassadors and the positive atmosphere between the two countries gave us great opportunities.” Ghobash said, adding that, “Our concern today regarding the region is the existence of security and stability in the region.”

Ghalibaf for his part said, “Experience shows that the more coherent and coordinated the neighboring Muslim countries are, the more strong they are in political, economic and environmental fields.”

Ghalibaf stresses expanding Iran ties with African nations

The Speaker of the House of Representatives (Egypt) Hanafi Jebali also told Ghalibaf in a separate meeting that “By participating in the BRICS group, we are on the right track for the development of the two countries.”

Ghalibaf stresses expanding Iran ties with African nations

Speaker of the Parliament of Namibia met with his Iranian counterpart separately in South Africa during which he called for developing commercial and economic relations between the two countries, especially in the field of mining.

KI/ALM telegram; TSNM2962988

Six killed amid Israel’s inaction toward spike in Arab murders

Six Arab people, including a five-member family, have been killed in the occupied territories, as Israel turns a blind eye to a wave of murders engulfing the minority community.

On Wednesday morning, masked gunmen ambushed and killed a Palestinian man, who was on his way to work in Haifa. 

A preliminary investigation identified the victim as 50-year-old Atef Abu Kalib.

Later in the day, five members of a single family, three men and two women, were killed in a shooting inside a house in Basmat Tab’un, an Arab town north of the occupied lands.

Police chief Kobi Shabtai arrived at the scene of the Basmat Tab’un mass shooting, with far-right Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir joining him later.

Ben-Gvir, who has been under pressure for his failure to oversee crime and the police department, was met with shouts of “go home” and “you’re not welcome here” by observers on the site.

“What did he come here for? What is this, putting on a show?” a bystander yelled at the extremist minister. “The time has come for this minister to go home. A shame and a disgrace to … Israel.”

Wednesday’s fatalities brought the number of Palestinian citizens of Israel killed so far this year to 188, compared to 80 recorded during the same period in 2022, according to the Abraham Initiatives anti-violence advocacy group.

Palestinian mayors have accused the Tel Aviv regime of deliberately neglecting their communities and of enabling criminals to act with impunity.

“Israel has the abilities, the Israeli government understands what needs to be done, everybody understands what needs to be done, there simply is no will and no leadership,” said Mansour Abbas, leader of one of the parties that represent Israel’s Palestinian minority.

Last month, Ben-Gvir said the crime wave poses a security threat to Israel and could spill over into Jewish communities, which he termed a “bigger threat” than near-daily murders among Arabs.

Meanwhile, Ismail Haniyeh, head of the political bureau of the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas, has pointed the finger at Israel and its spy agencies for the escalation of violence among Arabs.

The Zionists, he said early this month, “play a dangerous role that aims to engage our people in another struggle to forget their religious and historical ties to the Palestinian people in Gaza, the West Bank, and in exile.”

Iran envoy stresses activation of trade ties with Riyadh

Alireza Enyati, the ambassador of Iran to Riyadh was received for a meeting with Saud bin Mohammed Al Sati, Deputy Minister for Political Affairs of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia during which they discussed bilateral relations and the dialogue area

Enayati also held a meeting with Swiss Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Yasmine Chatila yesterday.

“I met with Ms. Yasmin Chatila, the ambassador of Switzerland, and discussed issues of mutual interest and expressed my gratitude for the work that Switzerland has done in the past years to take care of Iran’s interests in Saudi Arabia,” the Iranian ambassador wrote in a post on X.

KI/2962988

Iran: Israeli attacks on Syria smokescreen for crimes against Palestinians

Iran’s UN ambassador has said the Israeli regime’s recurrent violence against Syria serves as a smokescreen for Tel Aviv’s daily aggression targeting the Palestinians.

“We strongly condemn the ongoing attacks by the Israeli regime on Syrian territory,” Amir Saeid Iravani, the Islamic Republic’s permanent ambassador to the United Nations, said before a UN Security Council session on Syria on Thursday.

“The Israeli regime commits such aggressions to divert the attention of the international community from the daily atrocious crimes [it] is committing against the Palestinian people,” he added.

Israel has frequently attacked the positions of Syria’s military and its allies since 2011, when the Arab country found itself in the grip of rampant foreign-backed violence and terrorism.

The regime’s attacks mostly target the positions of Syria’s allies that have been aiding the country in its battle against foreign-sponsored terror groups.

Damascus has repeatedly complained to the UN over the Israeli assaults, urging the world body’s Security Council to take action against Tel Aviv’s crimes. Its demands, however, have fallen on deaf ears.

On foreign military presence in Syria

Iravani, meanwhile, asserted that “the fight against terrorism should not be utilized as a pretext to violate Syria’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

The United States and scores of its allies launched a military campaign against the Arab country in 2014 under the pretext of fighting the Takfiri terrorist group of Daesh.

The group had emerged in Syria and neighboring Iraq earlier that year as Washington was running out of excuses to extend its meddling in the West Asia region or enlarge it in scale.

Washington sustains the military presence in Syria, although, Damascus and its allies dealt a decisive defeat to the terror outfit in 2017.

“We firmly believe that the primary solution to the Syrian crisis lies in political means, as military actions will only further complicate the situation,” Iravani said.

The Iranian official further denounced the “illicit exploitation” of Syria’s resources, referring to the US’s underway smuggling of Syria’s oil and grain amid the Arab country’s dire economic situation.

Rights group files lawsuit to prevent Israelis from entering US without visa

A leading Arab American rights group is suing the US government and calling on a federal court to halt any further actions admitting Israel into the visa waiver program (VWP). 

The lawsuit, filed by the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), states that based on credible reports and investigations, Israel is currently on the verge of being accepted into the VWP, despite failing to meet the legal requirements needed for entry.

It accuses the US government of allowing Israel to discriminate against Americans entering the occupied West Bank and other Palestinian territories.

“Defendants’ decision to enter into an agreement that allows the Government of Israel to create different classes of US citizens and treat them disparately in a way that is not reciprocal with how the US treats Israeli citizens.”

Abed Ayoub, the ADC’s executive director, said in a statement said “dmitting Israel into the program would be an endorsement of discrimination against Palestinian and Arab Americans.”

Experts, rights groups, lawmakers, and Palestinian Americans have already raised concerns, saying that the Tel Aviv regime was creating a multi-tiered system of entry that treats different groups of US citizens unequally, particularly Palestinians and other Arab Americans.

Earlier this month, more than a dozen senators raised these concerns with the Biden administration, sending a letter that warned against moving forward with Israel’s entry into the VWP.

The ADC has said that the discrimination by Israel against American citizens even exists within the entity’s current policies, including restrictions on how Palestinian Americans can cross checkpoints into the occupied West Bank and the “inhumane treatment of Palestinian Americans when they try to return to the US”.

Palestinian Americans have been the latest victims of the ongoing violence in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

In the most recent incident, one Palestinian married to a US citizen was killed by Israeli troops during as hundreds of Israeli settlers rampaged through a West Bank village in June

Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh was deliberately shot and killed by the Israeli forces, in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin, May 19, 2022.

The Israeli military has taken no accountability for Palestinian American ctitizens it killed over past years.