Mahmoud Abbas, the leader of the world’s leading proponent
of anti-Semitism, the Palestinian Authority, has been ranting and raving of
late. Having lost his support in the region, having been told that it’s time to
make peace and to give up on a capital in Jerusalem, Abbas is reduced to
maniacal pronouncements… the kinds that are most likely to impress brain-dead
Europeans.
In the meantime, the Prime Minister of Israel has been
enjoying a tour of his new ally India. He has been greeted better than well,
with respect and admiration. He has established new trade agreements and has fortified an alliance. If you want to know what is going on in the world of foreign
relations, it is always good to follow shifting alliances. In the interest of
contributing to the public debate and discussion, we follow such events on this
blog.
While Benjamin Netanyahu and Indian Prime Minister Narendra
Modi are working together, the American media has for the most part ignored the
story. After all, it’s happening in Asia, so why should we care?
The Legal Insurrection blog has rounded up stories from the
Indian and Israeli press and has put together an outline of the relevant
information.
It begins with this:
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu began the fifth day of his six-day India
tour with a ‘power breakfast’ with a select group of Indian business leaders
and CEOs. Later he joined Prime Minister Nerendra Modi at the India-Israel
Business Summit hosted at the iconic Taj Hotel, one the sites hit by the 2008
Mumbai terror attack.
Netanyahu was very well received by the Indian people. Why
would this be? Perhaps because Israel has been a great success story… and has
achieved what it has achieved against very long odds:
Before
traveling to Mumbai, Prime Minister Netanyahu spent a day with Prime
Minister Modi in his home state of Gujarat where tens of thousands of
Indians showed up to welcome the visiting Israeli
leader. Jerusalem-based new website Times
of Israel reported the reception given to the visiting leader
in the Indian city of Ahmadabad on Wednesday:
“In
Ahmadebad, tens of thousands of people lined the street, some waving Israeli
flags, as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sped past, whizzing by massive
billboards with his and Indian counterpart Narendra Modi’s faces plastered on
them.
In
rural Dev Dholera, curious farmers and others craned their necks to catch a
glimpse of the prime ministers, and hundreds of young entrepreneurs and
business people cheered the leaders like rock stars.
In
Sabarkantha, villagers waved at the prime ministers’ helicopters as they came
in to land in a former forest that had been cleared to make way for a helipad.
Dancers in traditional dress did flips, and farmers told of how many rupees
they had made after training at an Israel-funded agricultural center.
Of course, there were business deals in the defense industry…
which highlight cooperation:
There
was some positive developments in the field of defense cooperation as well,
with India putting the $500 million deal to buy the Spike anti-tank guided
missiles back on the table. Earlier this month, India’s Ministry of
Defense unexpectedly announced its decision to
cancel an agreement with the Israeli defense manufacturer Rafael, amid
speculations that India wanted to develop the missile system ingeniously.
Pakistan is worried about the Israel-India cooperation.
After all, Israel has led the world in the fight against Islamic terrorism.
India’s
neighboring Islamic Republic of Pakistan has been rattled by growing
Israel-India cooperation in defense and counter-terrorism. Pakistan’s
Foreign Minister accused Israel and India of building an ‘anti-Islam nexus,’
several Pakistani newspapers reported.
How does the Israeli-Indian alliance compare to the trade
that Israel has been doing with China. It is still significantly smaller:
After
impressive growth in last two decades, the bilateral trade between the two
countries has fluctuated between 4-5 billion dollars in recent years. Israel’s
trade volume with China, however, reached almost thrice
that size in 2017.
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