Israel Eyes Dubai Expo as 'Portal' to Arab World

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With the world's largest trade fair opening in an Arab country for the first time next year, Israel is stepping up preparations, hoping to boost nascent ties with regional neighbors.

The Dubai Expo 2020 trade fair will gather nearly 200 countries vying for the attention of a projected 25 million visitors over nearly six months from October.

Like most Arab countries, the United Arab Emirates has no diplomatic relations with Israel.

But the Jewish state has been quietly moving closer to Gulf Arab countries on the basis of shared security interests and a common enemy -- Iran.

An Israeli pavilion at an Arab-hosted expo presents a unique opportunity to speed up the "normalization" of relations and reach out to Arab peoples, officials say.

"To us, the added value is in the Arab and Muslim visitor," said Elazar Cohen, the Israeli foreign ministry's pointman for the expo, which is organised by the Paris-based Bureau International des Expositions (BIE).

So far public overtures between Israel and Arab nations have been cautious, but notable, with Israeli athletes and officials increasingly allowed into Gulf countries.

The expo is "a unique meeting between cultures and languages and people who don't routinely meet", said David Knafo, the Tel Aviv-based architect behind the design of Israel's pavilion.

- 'No walls, no borders' -

Designed to reflect Israel's sense of belonging to the region as well as the openness the Jewish state seeks to broadcast to its Arab neighbors, "the pavilion is therefore an open space -– a living room to host the expo visitors."

Concept videos of the pavilion reveal stairs leading up a representation of a sand dune.

Described as a "pavilion with no walls and no borders," the stairs are arched by large LED screens showing images of different aspects of Israeli society.

The aim, Knafo said, is to symbolize Israel's transformation of its deserts through culture and technology, hinting at the possibility that other desert lands could do the same.

An auditorium below the pavilion will offer visitors an interactive multimedia experience, the foreign ministry's director general Yuval Rotem told AFP.

It aims to showcase "the Israeli spirit and culture" in innovations and developments from fields such as water, medicine and information technology, he said.

- Portal to Arab world -

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has described the Israeli expo pavilion as part of "the continued progress of normalization with the Arab states."

Past Israeli leaders saw peace with the Palestinians as the gateway to ties with the broader Arab and Muslim world.

But with the peace process frozen for years now, Netanyahu argues instead that building relations with Arab countries will push the Palestinians toward a peace deal with Israel.

The Israeli presence in Dubai "will create a buzz", said Cohen, noting that the lack of a peace agreement, or even process, with the Palestinians is still liable to draw the attention of at least some Arab visitors at the expo.

The pavilion's display won't touch on politics, he added, instead "focusing on what Israel has to offer".

Dore Gold, former director-general of the Israeli foreign ministry, said the "quasi-diplomatic presence" of the pavilion is one of several developments with "a cumulative effect".

He cited sporting competitions and the 2015 opening in Abu Dhabi of an Israeli mission to the International Renewable Energy Agency, which is based there. 

"It's not normalization, but it's an enhanced presence," he said.

While the Gulf Arab states have not lost interest in the Palestinian issue, "these countries are looking after themselves", Dore said, including enhancing security cooperation with Israel against Iran.

Gold, who heads the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs think-tank, said the expo was part of attempts to slowly publicize aspects of relations in the region not pertaining to security.

"The name of the game is how to find joint interests that don't create a big stir," he said.

"In any case, if you did public opinion surveys, you'd find that throughout most of the Gulf there's a kind of understanding that Israel's part of the region."

Diplomat Cohen and architect Knafo both noted the warm welcome they have received in the Gulf state, as work on the pavilion entered advanced stages and their visits to Dubai became more frequent.

"The attitude of the hosts is excellent," Cohen said.

"I didn't expect anything else but when you encounter it, it's heartwarming."

The expo could be "a portal to a world that was blocked to us, and our pavilion is a portal to the Israeli experience at all its levels -- scientific, cultural, human," said Knafo.

Comments 3
Missing phillipo over 4 years

Lebanon can learn from this.

Thumb lebanon_first over 4 years

Stab in the back behaviour of gulf states. UAE did not get invaded or bombarded by israel. Nor does it have 200,000 pal refugees.
It is acting selfishly and selling arabs short.

Lebanon would normalize with Israel provided israel either takes back Pals or pays for reaettling them in a third country. Plus Israel has to pay the cost of all environmental and economic destruction in caused in lebanon.

Philippo. We have nothing to learn from an apertheid state by the way.

Missing phillipo over 4 years

Who will pay Israel for the 800,000 Jewish refugees from the Arab States who were resettled without Israel receiving a single cent for that?
If it weren't for Hizaballah then there would have been no environmental and economic destruction caused to Lebanon.
Who is to blame that when in the early 1980's the Lebanese delegation returnefd to Beirut from peace talks with Israel, your then Syrian occupiers tore up the agreement?
How can you call Israel an Apartheid state when there is a non-Jewish judge on the Supreme Court, 15 non-Jewish members of Knesset, non-Jewish diplomats to foreign countries, non-Jewish senior officers of the armed forces and police, tens of thousands of non-Jewish judges and lawyers, doctors and nurses, teachers, etc., etc.? How many non-Moslems are in any of these positions in, let us say, Syria, Jordan, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangla Desh, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Bahrain, Oman, Yemen, Egypt, Libya or the Maghreb states?