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Opinion

Is Israel starting to pivot to Russia?

The outlines of the post-American Middle East are emerging, writes Dominic Green

February 25, 2021 14:23
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin F160607HZ020 (1)
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow, Russia, on June 7, 2016. Photo by Haim Zach / GPO ***HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY/NO SALES***
3 min read

While Joe Biden’s envoys try to tempt Iran back into the JCPOA, a new kind of diplomacy shows the shape of the future in a region where American influence is waning. Israel already has the most successful Covid-19 inoculation campaign of any liberal democracy. Last week saw a flurry of Covid diplomacy in the Middle East. None of it involved the United States.

Israel is alleged to have bought $1.2m-worth of Sputnik V jabs for shipping to the Assad regime in Syria. The secret deal, mediated by Moscow, is a sweetener in the exchange of a young Israeli woman who had entered Syria for two Syrian shepherds who had crossed into Israel.

Israel’s military censors kept the story out of Israeli media. Was it that Benjamin Netanyahu, only weeks away from elections, doesn’t want his rivals on the right criticizing him for trading the corona-elixir to Israel’s enemies — or his enemies on the left accusing him of propping up a war criminal? Or was it that Putin’s government, who have faced street protests and have been slow off the mark in the great vaccination race, didn’t want to be seen shipping shots abroad?

Either way, by the end of last week Netanyahu was reported as musing in a cabinet meeting about the further use of vaccine diplomacy with states that don’t officially recognize Israel. He didn’t have to look far for an example.

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