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News ID: 69390
Publish Date : 16 August 2019 - 22:28

U.S. Coordinating Secret Israel-UAE Talks: Report

WASHINGTON (Dispatches) — The United States is participating in secret talks between the United Arab Emirates and the occupying regime of Israel to confront Iran, the New York Times reported Friday.
The talks aim to broaden cooperation for military and intelligence sharing between the United Arab Emirates and Israel, it quoted a foreign official with knowledge of the diplomacy as saying.
The United Arab Emirates and the Zionist regime already share some security connections, experts said, and have held below-the-radar discussions in the past. The occupying regime of Israel has sold fighter jet upgrades and spyware to the United Arab Emirates, the Times said.
But including the United States in a new phase of security talks could signal the United Arab Emirates’ intent to demonstrate their commitment to the Trump administration’s so-called maximum pressure campaign against Iran — even as Emirati officials have stepped back from some of their own hardline policies targeting Tehran, the paper said
The three-sided talks, which were first reported by The Wall Street Journal, grew out of a February conference in Warsaw that was billed as a Middle East security forum but was used by the Trump administration to push its campaign against Iran. Since then, the three allies have met twice, the report said.
The foreign official confirmed the talks were being coordinated by Brian H. Hook, the senior State Department envoy on Iran issues. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity to confirm the secret discussions.
Last month, the United Arab Emirates pulled most of their forces from Yemen after years of supporting Saudi Arabia’s war. Emirati officials also recently held maritime security talks with Tehran.
Emirati officials are trying to "strike a very careful balancing act,” said Ilan Goldenberg, the director of the Middle East Security Program at the Center for a New American Security.
"They want to signal to the Trump administration and members of Congress — especially Republicans — that they aren’t walking away from the administration’s policies and the maximum pressure campaign against Iran,” he said.
The Trump administration’s campaign against Iran has been met with little reception since the United States withdrew in May 2018 from a nuclear accord between Tehran and world powers.
United States sanctions aim to stop Iran from exporting oil and other goods to foreign buyers. But the economic constraints have also irritated American allies and other nations that had sought to open markets in Iran.
The United Arab Emirates and other Arab states are generally careful to avoid appearing too close to the Zionist regime, given longstanding disputes over the rights of Palestinians and access to the Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem Al-Quds, one of the holiest sites in Islam.
Goldenberg said it was surprising that Emirati officials would agree to allow the United States into the longstanding and secretive talks with Israel.
"It is a sign they are willing to lean further forward, that they are not as worried about secrecy as they were,” said Goldenberg, who worked on regional security issues at the State Department and Pentagon during the Obama administration.