Axis of Normalization: The Arabs and Turks who sustain Israel’s wartime economy

by MOHAMAD HASAN SWEIDAN

While West Asia’s Axis of Resistance seeks to weaken Israel’s military, economy, and security, a handful of Arab states and Turkiye are secretly striving to bolster Israel and supply its war on Gaza. This is the region’s new ’Axis of Normalization.’

Yemen stands as one of the few Arab states working to mount economic pressure on the occupation state by blocking the shipment of Israeli-bound goods from transiting the Red Sea and other regional waterways.

Yet, while Yemen advances its sea blockades, other Arab states continue to provide a lifeline to Israel’s war-driven economy. Data from this year shows that countries that have normalized with Tel Aviv, like the UAE, Bahrain, Jordan, Egypt, and Morocco, are helping Israel overcome the blockade, providing critical trade routes that circumvent Yemeni efforts.

Meanwhile, Turkiye, whose president has ratcheted up his anti-Israeli rhetoric in public, has pursued a more deceptive approach, rerouting goods through Palestinian customs – and Greece – to disguise the extent of its direct trade with Israel.

Arab trade relations with Israel

The Cradle has previously reported on trade relations between Arab countries and Israel and how they are complicit in funding genocide. Despite expectations that these states would sever ties after Israel’s war of extermination on Gaza, the reality tells a different story.

While Yemen, under the Ansarallah-aligned government in Sanaa, has imposed a naval blockade on Israeli ports, many Arab governments have not taken similar actions. Instead, these countries engage in a double game, publicly condemning Israel while quietly maintaining economic ties, much like Colombia, which formally cut ties with Tel Aviv but continued discreet cooperation behind the scenes.

Trade figures for 2024 reveal a significant shift, particularly in relations between Bahrain and Israel. Israeli imports from Bahrain surged by an astonishing 1161.8 percent between January and July 2024 compared to the same period in 2023, despite Bahrain’s parliament issuing statements condemning Israel. In public, the two states played a very different game: Israel’s ambassador left Bahrain, and Manama recalled its envoy to Tel Aviv and suspended economic relations.

These actions were largely symbolic, aimed at appeasing a Bahraini public that overwhelmingly opposes normalization with Israel rather than reflecting genuine policy changes.

The UAE and Egypt: Pillars of economic support

The UAE, a key player in the US-brokered 2020 Abraham Accords, saw its Israeli imports rise by 14.2 percent in 2024. As the region’s spearhead for normalization with Tel Aviv, Abu Dhabi continues to play a strategic role in the US–Israeli plans for Gaza in the post-war period.

Secret meetings” in July between officials from Israel, the US, and the UAE aimed at quelling any resistance within Gaza, highlight Abu Dhabi’s critical role in supporting Israel’s future political projects.

It is important to note that the increase in imports from Bahrain and the UAE is primarily due to Israel’s growing reliance on their ports to transport goods from West Asia by land, through Saudi Arabia and Jordan, as a means of bypassing Yemeni strikes in the Red Sea. These parties deny the existence of this land route that The Cradleand other media outlets have long exposed.

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