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Are old fault lines in the Middle East opening up?

The Saudis and other Arab countries have reason to bristle over Qatar’s success in taking the driver’s seat in the negotiations between Israel-US and Hamas for hostage release. Meanwhile, their peace campaign hasn’t found takers. Pursuing the two-state solution while Hamas continues to lord over Gaza remains a tricky proposition for Arab countries wary of the group

December 13, 2023 / 09:55 IST
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The inability of the Arab states to have a ceasefire in place three months into the attacks makes for poor optics.

The Hamas Israel war has now entered its third month with a brief hiatus for a humanitarian ceasefire.  Intense discussions between Israel and Hamas continued in Qatar, Israeli hostages held by Hamas were being released, as were Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails, many of them without trial for a prolonged period of time. But Hamas broke the tacit understanding and Israel resumed its relentless bombardment as well as ground operations in the Gaza Strip. And on December 8 the US once again vetoed a UN Security Council resolution for a humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza and release of all hostages sponsored by the UAE.

It is difficult to gauge what exactly Hamas expected when it carried out the indiscriminate and barbaric attacks on Israel on October 7.  For till now it has brought the people Hamas claims to serve only unprecedented death, despair, and destruction of an unprecedented scale.

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The Qatar-Saudi Divide

Meanwhile, and inevitably, two tracks are visible in the Arab world regarding the conflict, something that has major implications for the rest of the world, and in particular India, which sees West Asia as part of its extended neighbourhood.