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UAE Pressed Zionist Lobbies to Make Anti-semitism Claims Against Riyadh

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UAE lobbied US pro-Israel groups in Washington to raise antisemitism concerns about Saudi Arabia, amid a widening rift over Yemen, Sudan and Gaza. The dispute underscores how the 2021 Abraham Accords are reshaping Gulf rivalries and US advocacy politics.

The United Arab Emirates has sought to leverage its post-2021 Abraham Accords ties in Washington to counter Saudi Arabia, pressing at least one prominent pro-Israel organization to raise concerns about alleged antisemitism in the kingdom, according to one current and one former US official. The episode illustrates how a bilateral Gulf rivalry has spilled into US advocacy networks, with Gaza and regional alignments sharpening the divide.

Abraham Accords as Leverage

The American Jewish Committee, which opened a satellite office in Abu Dhabi in 2021 known as The Sidney Lerner Center for Arab-Jewish Understanding, came under Emirati pressure to issue a statement about antisemitism in Saudi Arabia, a current US official told Middle East Eye.

The office’s mandate includes promoting “Muslim-Jewish dialogue,” “Combat antisemitism wherever it appears,” and advancing the 2021 Abraham Accords. Both AJC and the UAE embassy in Washington did not respond to a request for comment.

The Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which partnered with the UAE in 2023 to launch the Al Manara Centre in Abu Dhabi, issued a statement in January warning of the “increasing frequency and volume of prominent Saudi voices … using openly antisemitic dog whistles and aggressively pushing anti-Abraham Accords rhetoric.”

This article is described as the first report of direct Emirati lobbying tied to such claims.

In January, ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt underscored the group’s domestic reach: “I have 40 analysts working full-time 7 days a week, 24 hours a day monitoring ‘extremists.’”

We monitor these people, and we share the intelligence with the FBI. We monitor political islamists and christian nationalists, all of them… We are the largest trainer of law enforcement in America.

ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt

In view of ADL’s partnership with the UAE, including through the 2023 launch of the Al Manara Centre in Abu Dhabi, thier collaboration places an allegedly notorious and aggressive US-based pro-Israeli lobby in direct institutional alignment with an Arab state now engaged in a political dispute with Saudi Arabia.

“This Feud Has Taken on Religious Dimension”

A US official said “This feud has taken on a religious dimension,” noting that allegations of antisemitism could be particularly damaging in Washington.

Saudi Defense Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman met AJC and ADL officials during a US visit last month, followed by additional meetings, according to a separate source. A former US official described the outreach as “damage control.”

The rift intensified in December when Riyadh moved against UAE-aligned forces in Yemen. In Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Türkiye and Egypt back the Sudanese army against the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, which are supported by the UAE. Across the Red Sea, Saudi Arabia has deepened ties with Eritrea and Somalia as the UAE strengthens relations with Ethiopia.

Saudi writer Dr. Ahmed bin Othman Al-Tuwaijri accused the UAE of pursuing “the false illusion that the shortest path to revenge is to throw oneself into the arms of Zionism and become Israel’s Trojan horse in the Arab world.”

Writing in Al-Jazirah, he alleged UAE is making efforts “to give Israel a foothold in the Horn of Africa and control Bab al-Mandab,” and claimed, citing leaked documents, that “the Emirati leadership issued explicit directives to prepare military bases to serve Israeli operations in Gaza.”

Gaza and Narrative Control

The Gaza war has deepened the policy divide. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has labeled Israel’s campaign a genocide and conditioned normalization on a Palestinian state along 1967 lines, echoing the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative.

Over 72,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, and the United Nations has deemed the war a genocide. The 7 October attack derailed US-brokered talks that would have linked Saudi normalization to US nuclear cooperation, arms sales and a defense treaty.

Israel’s ties with the UAE have remained close though. In December 2025, Israel recognized Somaliland, where the UAE maintains a strategic military base.

The Gaza war has also sharpened divisions within Jewish and pro-Israel discourse globally, complicating efforts by Gulf states to frame criticism of Israel, normalization or the Abraham Accords in binary terms. While organizations such as the ADL and AJC position antisemitism monitoring as central to their mission, some Jewish religious figures have publicly rejected the conflation of anti-Zionism with antisemitism, particularly in the context of Gaza.

In Rabbi Yisroel Dovid Weiss’s words, “the textbook definition of anti-semitism is the Zionist state of Israel.” He added, “They are the personification of antisemitism. They are killing people in Gaza. They subject anyone who opposes them to terror, including Jews.” He argued the state had “created hatred between Muslims and Jews.”

For Gulf states, the dispute now operates on multiple fronts – Yemen, Sudan, the Horn of Africa and Washington advocacy circles. The Abraham Accords, signed in 2021, have provided new diplomatic channels. They have also introduced a fresh arena for contestation, where charges of antisemitism, normalization and regional alignment carry strategic weight far beyond the Gulf.

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Middle East

Bennett Turns Up The Heat On Netanyahu As Elections Loom

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Former Israeli PM Naftali Bennett criticized Netanyahu’s war strategy, outlining faster high-intensity alternatives for Gaza and Iran. His criticizm of Netenyahu intensifies as elections are due by October 2026.

Former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett criticized Netanyahu’s handling of Israel’s wars and his incapability to rein in far-right minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.

He positioned himself as a sharper, faster alternative ahead of elections due by October 27, 2026.

Ben-Gvir Is Hurting Israel

Bennett said it is costly for Netanyahu’s coalition to depend on National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.

“Israel’s international standing is so bad. It’s shocking, largely because of failures and statements made by government ministers,” he said.

“Netanyahu knows that Ben-Gvir’s repeated stunts are enormously harmful to Israel. They damage our standing in the United States and undermine Trump’s ability to help us. But Netanyahu is incapable of putting Ben-Gvir in his place because he depends on him.”

He reminded an earlier remark regarding nuking Gaza: “When you have a minister who stupidly says, ‘We’re going to nuke Gaza,’ you pay a huge, huge international price with zero benefit,”

“And your credit pool empties, and then by the time you actually need it for material, for serious stuff, you’ve run out of credit.”

Bennett Rejected a Palestinian Consulate In East Jarusalem

Bennett examplifying his stance on the face of ally pressure, said “Biden pressured Netanyahu to agree to the establishment of an American consulate for Palestinians in East Jerusalem. Netanyahu had agreed in principle to establish it.”

“Then I entered office, and Biden told me: ‘I demand that you establish the consulate.’”

“And I told him: ‘Mr. President, Jerusalem is the capital of only one state – the State of Israel. I must refuse.'”

A Strategy of “Siege” Is More Effective For Gaza

Bennett outlined an alternative tactical framework for Gaza based on isolation and siege rather than sustained urban warfare.

“We would isolate areas, apply a full siege on those areas and let the citizens out and trap the terrorists,” Bennett said.

Bennett also offered a striking observation on Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar’s decision to launch the October 7 attacks.

“Do you know what Sinwar’s greatest strategic mistake was? That he attacked. Because we were on the path to self-destruction.”

A Game on Iran Already Started With Mossad

On Iran, Bennett described a multi-layered strategy he said he had already begun putting in motion during his time in office:

“We need to embark on a multi-year, long-term strategy of accelerating the collapse of the regime – not only through kinetic action while ensuring they don’t achieve a nuclear weapon before,” he said.

“The actions that I had begun with the Mossad and other groups are about 30 different actions. Not only bombing. I’m talking about economic actions. I’m talking about cyber, overt, covert.”

Bennett has previously described himself as Iran’s “worst nightmare” if returned to power.

His Together alliance, nationalist in orientation but secular and more moderate in style than Netanyahu’s current far-right coalition partners, aims to peel away right-leaning voters frustrated with Netanyahu’s legal troubles, the judicial reform crisis, and what Bennett calls governance failures since October 7.

Bennett founded a new party in 2025 called Bennett 2026, and allied with centrist Yair Lapid of Yesh Atid to form a joint list called Together (Beyachad), which Bennett leads.

The alliance has polled in double digits for Knesset seats and is considered one of the most significant electoral threats to Netanyahu’s Likud-led coalition.

Bennett previously ousted Netanyahu once, in 2021.

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Middle East

Iran Formed Secret Iraqi Cells to Strike Gulf Nations: Report

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Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have established secretive new cells in Iraq to conduct drone attacks against Gulf countries hosting American forces, bypassing established proxy networks to maintain operational secrecy and avoid detection.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has established secretive new cells in Iraq to execute attacks against Gulf countries hosting American forces.

The strategy intentionally bypasses established militia networks to avoid detection, according to eight Iraqi sources who told Reuters.

The covert network comprises three or four elite cells, each containing approximately 10 Iraqi Shi’ite fighters.

These units launched at least seven drone attacks from desert locations near Basra and Samawa against targets in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates between April 20 and May 17.

Tactical Shift Under Economic Strain

The formation of these directly controlled units represents a significant shift in Iranian tactical operations.

The strategy aims to preserve Tehran’s regional force projection at a time when its traditional proxy network is diminished and its economic resources are depleted.

While some members were selected from the Islamic Resistance in Iraq umbrella group, these new cells operate entirely outside its command structure.

The units report directly to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

The development follows signals from established Iraqi Shi’ite factions that they intend to disarm and transition into domestic politics.

This shift is intended to prevent direct conflict with the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump.

Regional Deniability and Plausible Cover

Operating smaller, highly radicalized cadres allows Tehran to maintain plausible deniability.

The arrangement insulates major Iran-backed political groups in Baghdad from Western retaliation and reduces U.S. pressure on the Iraqi government to disband them.

The newer groups operate under unfamiliar names with minimal public profiles.

They prioritize strict ideological loyalty and low operational footprints over mass recruitment.

The U.S. State Department has reiterated expectations that the Iraqi government dismantle all instruments of Iranian activity on its soil.

Iraqi Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi and U.S. Envoy Tom Barrack recently discussed comprehensive disarmament plans for groups operating outside state control.

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Middle East

Strait of Hormuz Transit Fees Waived for 60-Day Period, PGSA Confirms

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The Persian Gulf Strait Authority has confirmed that all security, safety, and environmental service fees for vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz will be waived, but strictly within a specified 60-day period following the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding.

The Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA) confirmed Friday that vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz will not be charged fees, though the waiver is strictly limited to an announced 60-day period.

The temporary financial relief follows the signing of the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding and subsequent instructions from relevant authorities.

Fees After 60 Days?

During this designated 60-day window, the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran will also provide related insurance coverage for transiting vessels.

The suspension of service fees applies strictly to the specified timeframe, after which standard regulations are expected to resume.

Pre-Transit Mandates

To avoid operational delays at the strategic waterway’s entrance or exit, the authority has instituted mandatory pre-transit requirements.

Vessels must submit a formal transit request through official channels at least 48 hours prior to arriving in the strait area.

The application must include all required information, specifically vessel contact details and the exact route.

Safety Coordination Protocols

The PGSA cited special conditions and certain safety risks along the transit route as the basis for tightened oversight.

To ensure safe navigation and prevent maritime incidents, every vessel is required to coordinate its route and transit timing before entering the area.

The authority noted that failure to comply with these coordination and filing protocols remains the vessel owner’s sole responsibility.

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