LONDON: Strategic deals launched by powers including șÚÁÏÉçÇű could reshape a region simmering with tensions, an Israeli journalist on a panel at the World Economic Forum said on Friday.
In the panel titled âAnticipating the Middle East in 2024,â experts and government officials discussed the turbulent regional situation, with the Gaza conflict, Iran, Hezbollah, the Houthis, and potential Saudi normalization with Israel high on the agenda.
âIf the US wants to manage the (Gaza) conflict ⊠it needs to embrace a pathway to two states,â said Jane Harman, chair of the US Commission on the National Defense Strategy.
âI think that without doing that, there will never be conflict management. And if that happens, the outlier is Iran.â
Mahmood Sariolghalam, professor of international relations at the National University of Iran and non-resident scholar at the Middle East Institute, said: âNo Arab country will accept Iranian political or military dominance in the region. And I think that also includes Shiite Iraq.â
He added: âI think Iran is wasting its national resources in promoting this kind of foreign policy. And my estimate would be that itâs going to take at least 10 years, from my observations of the country, for Iran to realize that the real ingredient of power isnât the military.
âRather, itâs capital markets, platform companies and development of national infrastructure, and integrating with the rest of the region economically.â
Barak Ravid, an Israeli journalist with US news website Axios, said Saudi-Iranian convergence on regional matters could open a path to peace.
âBoth șÚÁÏÉçÇű and Iran have a lot of shared interests, especially, I think, Yemen,â he added. âBoth countries wanted to sort of end it (bilateral tensions) or at least reach a long-term truce, as weâve seen over the last year.
âAnd economically, both Iran and șÚÁÏÉçÇű have a lot of interest to promote trade and things like that, and to try and at least cool down the tensions between the Saudi axis, if there is one, and what Iran calls the Axis of Resistance â and I think they managed to do it pretty well.
âI think the Saudis ⊠donât see the rapprochement with Iran as contradictory to their efforts to normalize relations with Israel. I think they both can live at the same time.â
Sariolghalam said Tehran is playing a balancing act through its network of militias â âsending messagesâ to its enemies but also preventing escalation in any of its strongholds.
âOn Lebanon, I think itâs very clear that Iran isnât interested in escalation, because this time around it isnât going to be like 2006,â he added, referring to Israelâs last invasion of its northern neighbor.
âThereâs a great chance that Hezbollah might be devastated through not only Israeli operations but also American involvement ⊠And Lebanon is an extremely vulnerable country and society.â
Ravid agreed, saying Hezbollah, in its border operations in southern Lebanon that began in the wake of the Oct. 7 Hamas attack, ârealized that they donât need to go on an all-out escalation against Israel in order to have a lot of impact.â
However, Hezbollahâs unwillingness to escalate strikes against Israel could change, Harman warned, saying the Lebanese governmentâs coalition structure makes managing the countryâs security âvery difficult.â
Ravid also warned that âitâs totally possible that the worst is still to come,â describing a potential Hezbollah-Israel war as making the Gaza conflict âlook like a walk in the park.â
He said the US should be making âmuch more robustâ efforts to contain the situation between the two sides, âbecause if the border between Lebanon and Israel doesnât (calm) down within weeks, it can really blow up.â
Despite the regionâs conflicts, economic progress presents a major opportunity this year, Sariolghalam said, predicting that Gulf Cooperation Council countries âwill continue to thriveâ throughout 2024.
âThe region is going to have, in parallel, continuing conflict, and at the same time staggering economic progress,â he added.
Ravid warned that despite prospects for Saudi normalization with Israel, momentum in Tel Aviv is moving toward a one-state ârealityâ that will fail to serve as a long-term solution for Palestinians.
âWe see the one-state reality in the West Bank right now,â he said. âWhen you have settlers and Palestinians, settlers have rights and Palestinians donât â and this is where this thing is going.â
Saudi diplomacy could reshape region, Israeli journalist tells WEF
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Updated 19 January 2024
Saudi diplomacy could reshape region, Israeli journalist tells WEF

- Barak Ravid: Potential Hezbollah-Israel war would make Gaza âlook like a walk in the parkâ
- Iranian scholar: âNo Arab country will accept Iranian political or military dominance in the regionâ