DAVOS: Normalizing ties between Israel and 海角直播 is a key element of ending the war with Hamas and a gamechanger for the entire Middle East, Israeli President Isaac Herzog said Thursday at the World Economic Forum鈥檚 annual meeting in the Swiss town of Davos.
鈥淚t鈥檚 still delicate, it鈥檚 fragile, and it will take a long time, but I think that it is actually an opportunity to move forward in the world and the region toward a better future,鈥 Herzog said.
It comes days after 海角直播鈥檚 foreign minister, Prince Faisal bin Farhan, said on a Davos panel that the kingdom agreed 鈥渞egional peace includes peace for Israel.鈥 He said 海角直播 鈥渃ertainly鈥 would recognize Israel as part of a larger political agreement.
鈥淏ut that can only happen through peace for the Palestinians, through a Palestinian state,鈥 he said.
US Secretary Antony Blinken also reiterated in a talk at Davos that a pathway to statehood for Palestinians could help improve Israel鈥檚 security and its relations with other countries in the region.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his right-wing government, however, are opposed to the concept of a two-state resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Herzog, whose ceremonial role is meant to serve as a national unifier, said public support for it is low because traumatized Israelis are focused on their own safety following Hamas鈥 deadly Oct. 7 rampage. He displayed a photo of Kfar Bibas, the youngest Israeli held hostage in Gaza whose first birthday is Thursday.
鈥淲hen nations come forward and say 鈥榯wo-state solution,鈥 they have to first deal with a preliminary question, which is a core question for human beings: Are we offered real safety?鈥 Herzog said. 鈥淚sraelis lost trust in the peace process because they could see that terror is glorified by our neighbors.鈥
Herzog also used the world stage to stress the global implications of Hamas鈥 attack on Israel, which he said is just one of the proxies of the 鈥渆mpire of evil emanating from Tehran.鈥
Amid the conflict in Gaza, Iran has taken military action against what it called an Israeli intelligence operation in neighboring Iraq. Iran-backed rebels in Yemen known as Houthis also have upended global shipping by attacking vessels in the Red Sea, triggering a series of retaliatory strikes from the US and Britain.
鈥淭he Houthi issue is a number one priority, because it raises the cost of living for every family in the universe, a little tribe of 50,000 people, amassed with the weapons of an empire,鈥 Herzog said.
On Wednesday, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian insisted Iran鈥檚 strike in Iraq, as well as against an alleged militant base in Pakistan, as part of his country鈥檚 right to self-defense and accused Israel of 鈥済enocide鈥 in its campaign against Hamas, which has killed thousands of Palestinian civilians.
Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani also condemned the war in Gaza during a Davos talk Thursday, saying 鈥渢he international community has failed.鈥
At the same time, Sudani sought to balance Iraq鈥檚 position between the United States and Iran during the war and as Iran-backed militias in Iraq have launched near-daily strikes on bases housing US forces in Iraq and Syria, which they have said is in retaliation for Washington鈥檚 backing of Israel.
Sudani said Iraq has 鈥渋nterests鈥 and 鈥渟trategic partnerships鈥 with both Iran and the United States. But he did reiterate calls for US-led coalition forces to withdraw from his country, saying their presence is no longer justified because their mission was to fight the Daesh group, which is 鈥渘o longer a threat to the Iraqi people.鈥
The Iraqi and Israeli leaders were headliners in Thursday鈥檚 flurry of activity in the warren of rooms at the Davos Congress Center in the third day of the gathering of world leaders, corporate titans and other elites.
Other high-profile speakers included OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who kept his job after a turbulent executive-suite reshuffle late last year.
The four-day confab at Davos has taken up a vast array of topics, not least the concerns about climate change and artificial intelligence that offers economic promise to some and peril to others.
鈥淎rtificial intelligence is now undoubtedly the most important potential contribution for global development,鈥 UN Secretary-General Ant贸nio Guterres told reporters Wednesday. But governments are 鈥渢o a certain extent, ill-equipped, ill-prepared, to deal with this new reality.鈥
A breakfast panel on the meeting鈥檚 sidelines Thursday concentrated on Ukraine鈥檚 fight against Russia, a major theme at Davos.
Polish President Andrzej Duda called for the release of confiscated Russian assets in Western banks to help Ukraine, saying $60 billion earmarked for reconstruction of Ukraine by the United States and 50 billion euros by the European Union were 鈥渃rucial.鈥
British Foreign Secretary David Cameron urged the EU and US to move forward with stalled aid packages and for allies to remember that together their economies are 25 times bigger than Russia鈥檚.
鈥淎ll we need to do is make our economic strength show, make it pay, and we will be able to help Ukraine bring this to a conclusion,鈥 said Cameron, who met with Iran鈥檚 foreign minister at Davos.
The husband of US Vice President Kamala Harris, Doug Emhoff, was jetting in Thursday to discuss combating antisemitism, Islamophobia and other forms of hate.
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