Seven reasons for the failure of the “Abraham Agreement” (the deal of the century) between Israel and Arab states.
An e-newspaper citing seven documented reasons wrote that the agreement to normalize relations between some countries and the Zionist regime with the mediation of the United States, known as the “Abraham Peace” agreement, is falling apart.
Last year (2020), the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco, through the mediation of the then US government headed by Donald Trump, signed a normalization agreement with the occupational regime in Jerusalem, known as the “Peace Treaty of Abraham” (or Peace of Ibrahim) Agreement to establish diplomacy.
The peace deal, which Donald Trump and his son-in-law Jared Kouchner touted amid media hype, appears to be waning in less than a year, according to a report in the Daily Mail. It is breaking down.
The e-newspaper cites the following seven reasons for this statement:
First, the closure of the Abraham Fund, which Trump established with US-Emirati investment to fund normalization projects.
Second: Oman Foreign Minister Badr bin Hamad bin Hamoud Al-Busaidi in an interview with Al-Sharq Al-Awsat newspaper that his country will not be the third Gulf state to compromise with the Zionist regime, and Muscat based on the two-state solution and resolutions International legitimacy emphasizes Palestine. The remarks came a day before the Omani foreign minister visited Riyadh (more details).
Third, the withdrawal of the US government led by Joe Biden from many of the promises and policies of the former US administration to Morocco and Sudan in return for the recognition of Moroccan sovereignty over the Sahara Republic and large investments in Sudan.
Fourth, widespread public outcry in most of the countries that signed the Abraham Peace Agreement under US pressure and with financial and political promises. Sudan, for example, has seen mass protests against the normalization of relations, and the Israeli ambassador to Morocco is still staying at a hotel because no one is willing to rent him a house or hand him a seat as an embassy.
Fifth: Sudan and Bahrain voted in favor of a UN resolution calling for an international inquiry into Zionist war crimes in the recent war against the Gaza Strip, which shocked the Zionist regime.
Sixth: Tensions in relations between the two major countries confirming this agreement. The first was the UAE, which signed it, and the second was Saudi Arabia, which was about to sign it. The coalition of the two has broken up on the issue of Yemen or the coalition against some Arab countries. Bahrain is in the middle and does not know which side will stand on the side of the UAE, which has established relations with the Zionist regime, or the Saudi side, which has established good relations with Qatar and is approaching Oman, which has openly opposed the normalization of relations.
Seventh: Joe Biden’s decision to withdraw all US troops from Afghanistan, collect eight Patriot and Todd anti-missile systems from four countries: Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Kuwait and Iraq, and transfer US ground forces and heavy equipment from Al-Siliyah base in Qatar to Jordan as part of a plan to focus on East Asia and counter China’s growing power.
The report concludes with a recent war between the Palestinian resistance and the Zionist regime known as “Saif al-Quds,” in which 4,000 rockets were fired at occupied Palestine. This victory of the Palestinian resistance played a role in overturning the Abrahamic peace agreement and its consequences.