Emirati
foreign minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Jordan's
counterpart Ayman al-Safadi arrive for a meeting with U.S. Secretary of
State Antony Blinken and foreign ministers of Egypt, Qatar, Saudi Arabia
and Palestinian representatives on Nov. 04, 2023 in Amman, Jordan.
Photo: Jordan Pix/Getty Images
A meeting
between Secretary of State Antony Blinken and a group of Arab officials
about a month ago flew off the rails after an unusual shouting match
between the UAE foreign minister and a senior adviser to the Palestinian
president, according to five sources with knowledge of the incident.
Why it matters: The
heated spat reflects skepticism over the Palestinian Authority's
planned reforms and disputes among Arab leaders, both of which could
challenge the Biden administration's efforts to forge a post-war strategy for Gaza.
Driving the news: The April 29 meeting took place in Riyadh on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum meeting.
- In
addition to Blinken, the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, Egypt,
Jordan, Qatar, Kuwait and the UAE attended as well as Palestinian
minister Hussein al-Sheikh, who is Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas'
closest deputy.
- The goal of the meeting was to discuss a joint post-war strategy for Gaza.
Behind the scenes: According to the sources, during the meeting al-Sheikh said the Palestinian Authority is conducting reforms and created a new government as the U.S. and Arab countries asked, but it isn't getting enough political and financial support.
- Toward
the end of the meeting the Emirati Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin
Zayed pushed back and said he hasn't seen any significant reform inside
the Palestinian Authority, the sources said.
- According to two
sources, the Emirati foreign minister then called the Palestinian
leadership "Ali Baba and the forty thieves" and claimed senior officials
in the Palestinian Authority are "useless" and therefore "replacing
them with one another will only lead to the same result."
- "Why would the UAE give assistance to the Palestinian Authority without real reforms?" he asked.
Al-Sheikh shouted back at
the Emirati foreign minister and said nobody will dictate to the
Palestinian Authority how to conduct its reforms, the sources said.
- According
to the sources, Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal Bin Farhan Al Saud tried
to cool down the heated exchange and said reforms take time.
- But
the meeting had already gotten out of control with both sides shouting
at each other and the Emirati minister leaving the room in anger.
- Jordanian
Foreign Minister Ayman al-Safadi left the meeting and came back several
minutes later with the Emirati foreign minister who then apologized to
Blinken that he had to witness the internal squabble.
- An
Emirati official confirmed the remarks from the foreign minister and
said: "His Highness added that if the Palestinian Authority paid as much
attention to its own people as it does to security coordination with
Israel the Palestinians will be in much better shape."
- Al-Sheikh and the State Department declined to comment.
The big picture:
Tensions between the UAE and the Palestinian Authority stem from both
personal and policy disputes and there has long been a rift between
Emirati President Mohammed bin Zayed (MBZ) and Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas.
- One of MBZ's closest advisers is Mohammed
Dahlan, a main political rival of Abbas, which has increased Abbas'
suspicion towards the UAE.
- The Emiratis on the other hand have for years accused Abbas and the Palestinian leadership of being corrupt.
- The Palestinian leadership accused the UAE of betraying them after the Emiratis normalized relations with Israel in 2020.
Flashback: Before
the appointment of the new Palestinian prime minister Mohammed Mustafa,
the Emiratis lobbied the Biden administration against him claiming he
was one of Abbas' confidants.
- The Emiratis pushed for former Palestinian prime minister Salam Fayyad — an Abbas critic — to be appointed instead.