By
Ariel Harkham
January2,
2021
Over the
past few months, Israel has experienced a flurry of peace it hasn’t experienced
in the previous 25 years. The Abraham Accords have normalized relations with
Arab countries that few, if any, expected to see in our lifetime.
White House senior adviser Jared Kushner (L) and Israel's National
Security Adviser Meir Ben-Shabbat are seen in Rabat disembarking from the first
direct El Al flight from Israel to Morocco on December 22, 2020.
(photo credit: AMOS BEN-GERSHOM/GPO)
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Of all the
four Islamic state normalization agreements, Israel’s most recent agreement
forged with Morocco stands out for its potential for long-term strategic
advantage. If properly nurtured, a Morocco alliance could represent the end of
Israel’s search for a state to serve as a bridge to the Muslim world.
Peace with
the Muslim world has always been a strategic imperative for the Jewish state.
And one key element in Israel’s pursual of that broad peace was the idea of
creating a “bridge” between itself and these strategically distant nations. But
the last time Israel sought, and briefly found, a bridge of that sort, things
did not end well.
In the
early 1990s, Israel began nurturing its relationship with Turkey. Given
Turkey’s status as the most famous of the world’s nation-bridges, bringing
together Europe and the Mideast, this was perhaps appropriate. For Israel,
however, that bridge crumbled with the rise of Erdogan, an Islamist-nationalist
strongman who had no appetite for peacemaking with a country he has called a
cancer.
Still, the
Turkey experiment held a unique potential. That Islamic nation striving for a
better position in the global economy and greater domestic stability found in
Israel a willing partner, who, in return, desired a reliable security and
diplomatic partner to keep the regional peace.
Because of
this, understanding the factors that transformed a stable and vital
relationship between Jerusalem and Ankara into one of hostility is critical if
Israel’s diplomats do not wish to see the Turkish debacle repeated. Three
elements that contributed to the decline of the Turkish-Israeli relationship
bear close attention. They are absent in Morocco but bear scrutiny.
The first
is proximity. The Middle East is a cauldron of geopolitical activity that draws
in any nation who desires hegemonic power and influence. Ironically, one of the
greatest factors contributing to a Moroccan-Israeli alliance is that Morocco is
not actually situated in the Middle East (as Arabia and the Levant) but is the
westernmost nation of the coast of North Africa.
Future
Moroccan-Israeli relations, due in large part to Morocco’s outsider status,
will not be as susceptible to the game-of-thrones nature of Middle Eastern
politics. The lesson here is that geography matters. The bridge needs to come
from outside, not within the Middle East that can critically safeguard this
alliance from the passions that co-opted Israeli-Turkey relations.
The second
element is history. Turkey’s Ottoman past of domination shapes its aspirations
today. Morocco has no such pretentions to empire and so is far less susceptible
to an Arabist populist foreign policy that would likely disfavor relations with
Israel. Morocco, like Turkey, shares an international frontier with the West in
the form of its border with Spain, reinforcing its moderate orientation towards
Western nations. Unlike Turkey, it does not maintain territorial grievances
with its Western neighbors, the likes of which served to stoke Turkish
nationalism into anti-West hostility.
But we also
can’t ignore the Moroccan-American Treaty of Friendship (1777), which is the
oldest unbroken friendship treaty in US history. (It’s often glossed over that
Moroccan soldiers served in the French army in both the First and Second World
Wars.) Morocco has a melting-pot culture, boasts the world’s fourth largest
Arab population and yet its history bears a rich ethnic makeup, having hosted
Carthaginians, Phoenicians and Jews from the east.
THE LESSON
for Israel is that history cannot be photoshopped for political convenience.
Turkey’s backsliding to an Ottoman-styled politics, is no accident. Past is
prologue, whether it was glossing over the Cyprus occupation, or ignoring the
Armenian genocide, we see now the writing was already on the wall. An
established history for tolerance and pluralism is a cultural commodity
precious to a Jewish State subjected to national prejudice and ethnic demonization.
The third
element is institutional politics. In the topsy-turvy nature of the Middle
East, the deeper the roots the less vulnerable they are to the scorched-earth
passions that too often flare up in the region. Turkey once seemed so attractive
on account of the trappings of a modern democratic state which it inherited
after World War I. Yet the Kemalist revolution has faded as Erdogan’s autocracy
is sanctioned by his altering – virtually at whim – the Turkish constitution.
Though
Morocco is a constitutional monarchy, it has enjoyed a stable political order
that has weathered the test of time. Where Turkey’s democracy is regressing,
Morocco’s government is gradually liberalizing. And there exists an effective
political opposition, making Morocco the first Arab country to have an
opposition party assuming power from an elective process.
To put it
clearly, Morocco may not have the sort of allure the Kemalist upheaval on the
Bosporus attracts as a bridge-builder between East and West. Israel must swallow
the lesson. Nevertheless, Morocco has the time-stamped credentials to make the
argument that it is one of the very few moderate and stable Muslim states in
the world.
Israel
finds in Morocco a stable, democratizing, and liberalizing Arab Muslim nation,
a state that enjoys free-trade agreements with the US and the EU and an economy
based on free-trade principles. Israel, for its part, offers many carrots for a
Morocco looking to embrace the 21st century. For one, Israel generates greater
national prestige on the world stage by making it a power broker in the region;
further, by passing the Israel litmus test, Morocco will exponentially bolster
its status as a moderate in a region bereft of such titles.
The only
true hindrance is not the résumés of these two nations but the imagination of
both countries political elites to seize the moment the Abraham Accords
provides. As the first Israel-US delegation touches down in Rabat this week,
upgrading diplomacy with Morocco must be accomplished carefully where public
relations, cultural exchanges and diplomatic pageantry becomes just as
important, if not more, than the papers signed between the two. Yet, we cannot
ignore the pitfall of the past as we confront – for the first time in a
generation – a serious opportunity for Israel to begin building an enduring
strategic alliance with a Muslim state.
Original
Headline: Morocco: Israel’s bridge to the Muslim world?
Source: The Jerusalem Post
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-politics/the-abraham-accords-morocco-alliance/d/123971
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