As Trump
heads to the Gulf, Israel asks where it stands
"The message to the region was clear: Israel
is no longer a top U.S. priority," wrote Itamar Eichner, diplomatic
correspondent for Israeli news outlets ynet, echoing media commentators across
the political spectrum.
By James
Mackenzie
May 12,
20258:26 PM GMT+2Updated 10 hours ago
https://www.reuters.com/world/trump-heads-gulf-israel-asks-where-it-stands-2025-05-12/
Summary
Trump set
to visit Saudi Arabia, Qatar and UAE
He will
not visit Israel during the trip
Some
Israelis wonder about state of Israel-U.S. ties
JERUSALEM,
May 12 (Reuters) - Israeli officials have put a brave face on U.S. President
Donald Trump bypassing them on a Middle East trip this week, but his decision
to do so is the latest to sow doubt in Israel about where it stands in
Washington's priorities.
On Sunday, a
few days after announcing plans for an expanded military operation in Gaza,
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said it had been informed by the
United States of an agreement to release U.S.-Israeli hostage Edan Alexander,
after talks between Washington and Hamas that did not include Israel.
Trump, who
will be visiting Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, also caused
consternation in Israel last week by abruptly announcing the U.S. would stop
bombing Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen, days after a Houthi missile hit near
Israel's main airport.
"The
message to the region was clear: Israel is no longer a top U.S. priority,"
wrote Itamar Eichner, diplomatic correspondent for Israeli news outlets ynet,
echoing media commentators across the political spectrum.
One Israeli
official said Trump's announcement on the Houthis was "kind of an
embarrassment" and that the president acts "for good and for
bad".
Israel has
been talking to the U.S. about the post-war future of Gaza and officials say
relations at the official level remain strong, but some officials acknowledge
being blindsided by Trump's decision-making.
One senior
official in Netanyahu's circle, who declined to be identified by name said
there was "chaos" in the Trump administration, with everything
dependent on what the president decided at any given moment. Sometimes that
helped Israel and sometimes it did not, the official said.
The decision
on the Houthis, which was not discussed with Israel beforehand, compounded
Israeli unease at U.S. talks with Iran over Tehran's nuclear programme, which
could blunt any Israeli threat of military action against its arch-enemy.
Israel faced
further alarm after Reuters reported that the U.S. was no longer demanding
Saudi Arabia normalise ties with Israel as a condition for progress on civil
nuclear cooperation talks.
"We
coordinate. It doesn't mean you must fully agree 100% on every issue,"
Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said on Sunday. "The U.S. is a sovereign
state. Israel is a sovereign state. But I believe we have a very, very big
common ground of positions with this administration, more than in the
past."
In March,
Trump's hostage negotiator, Adam Boehler, held what Hamas described as
"very helpful" meetings with the Palestinian militant group that
bypassed Israel and focused on releasing Alexander.
Last week,
U.S. ambassador Mike Huckabee denied Trump was distancing himself from Israel.
He said the relationship was often described as ironclad and "that word is
still operative."
"The
president has been consistent in his support and his partnership and I have no
reason to believe that that won't continue," he said.
"CHAOS"
Netanyahu
and his government faced criticism on Monday even as Israelis looked forward to
Alexander's release, with a growing perception in the public that the two
allies had differing priorities.
"There's
just no leadership now," said Tel Aviv pensioner Jack Gottlieb. There was
"no question" the deal happened behind Netanyahu's back or that the
U.S. and Israeli agendas currently differed, he said.
"Right
now, it's every man for himself," Gottlieb said.
Netanyahu
had little choice but to accept the decision on the Houthis, who signalled they
would not stop trying to hit Israel by firing another missile a few days later.
Israel has
relied on U.S. military and diplomatic support since its creation as an
independent state in 1948. Any weakening of U.S. interest, as Israel faces
international pressure over the Gaza war, would be a severe blow.
The decision
to drop the demand for a normalisation deal between Saudi Arabia and Israel, to
get past Riyadh's insistence that Israel agree to moves towards a settlement
with the Palestinians, underlined how damaging the issue has been for Israel
internationally.
Adding Saudi
Arabia to the United Arab Emirates and Bahrein, which both normalised relations
with Israel under the Abraham Accords signed during Trump's first term, has
been a major goal for Netanyahu but is now seemingly delayed indefinitely.
Trump's
predecessor, Joe Biden, faced bitter criticism from Israeli hardliners after
stopping exports of some heavy munitions used in Gaza and imposing sanctions on
violent Israeli West Bank settlers.
By contrast
Trump, in his first term, defied world opinion by moving the U.S. embassy to
Jerusalem, which Israel regards as its capital, and recognised Israel's
annexation of the Golan Heights, which it seized in the 1967 Middle East war.
Israeli
officials have said previously that they were aware there were risks for Israel
in a president as unpredictable as Trump and one who has shown no compunction
in turning on historic U.S. allies.
"But we
don't have a choice," said one.
Additional
reporting by Emily Rose and Jerusalem Newsroom, Editing by Timothy Heritage
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