The Gaza Endgame and Saudi Arabia’s Role

GEOPOLITICAL EXPERTS ARE OPENLY SPECULATING about the terms of a truce in the Gaza war. It won’t be easy — Israel will be very reluctant, Hamas will continue to be a huge threat, and hostages will have to be released. But there’s one unique aspect of the ongoing talks — Saudi Arabia will play a significant role.

SEVERAL IMPORTANT DETAILS WERE LEAKED yesterday by Washington Post columnist David Ignatius, who is fast becoming the most influential Mideast analyst in the world, even more plugged in than the ubiquitous Tom Friedman at the New York Times. Ignatius concedes that a settlement isn’t imminent — but he thinks the rough outlines of a deal are taking shape.

U.S. SOURCES — including National Security Director Jake Sullivan — were in Israel and Saudi Arabia this past weekend, and they apparently gave Ignatius a deep briefing on what may lie ahead.

FIRST AND FOREMOST, leaders in the region are relieved that despite enormous casualties, the war has not engulfed the entire region. Sources credit the impact of behind the scenes talks between the U.S. and Iran, which apparently kept the temperature from boiling.

THE IRANIANS have kept their allies the Houthis from striking aggressively in the Red Sea, and the U.S. has refrained from stepping up attacks against Iranian proxies in Syria and Iraq. The Iranians responded by slowing their enrichment of uranium. And both countries worked together in an unsuccessful attempt to rescue President Ebrahim Raisi this past weekend.

THE MOST INTRIGUING DEVELOPMENTS HAVE COME FROM ISRAEL: Instead of a furious ground attack in Rafah, the Israelis are now leaning toward a more limited assault that — U.S. officials think — will result in fewer civilian casualties. For that reason, President Biden has begun to tone down his criticism of Benjamin Netanyahu.

THE ISRAELIS CLEARLY ARE PREVAILING AGAINST HAMAS: 75 percent of its military has been destroyed, and Israel may be content to police the region and not go after the remaining guerrillas — although Netanyahu and his far-right Cabinet have not signed off on that.

IF ISRAEL ALLOWS HAMAS TO “melt into the population as a guerrilla force,” as Ignatius says, this will be a continuing headache for Israel, which probably will have to conduct regular raids against insurgents there.

WHAT WILL HAPPEN ON “the day after” a truce takes effect? Ignatius writes that it probably will include a Palestinian security force drawn in part from the Palestinian Authority’s administrative payroll in Gaza.

THIS PALESTINIAN FORCE would be overseen by a governing council of Palestinian notables, backed by moderate Arab states such as Egypt, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. Some Israeli officials — but not Netanyahu — accept that this governing entity would have ties with the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah.

PERHAPS MOST PROMISING, Saudi Arabia has agreed to a “near final” draft of a security agreement with the U.S. that would include normalization of relations with Israel. (A similar treaty appeared to be imminent on Oct. 7.)

THE ELEMENTS OF AN AGREEMENT that would bring an eventual end to the war are there, Ignatius says — on paper. Because Netanyahu’s right-wing coalition balks at many of the details, the final dealmaking might fall to a future Israeli government. But in the distance, you can see the contours of a possible exit ramp, Ignatius says.

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