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John R Bradley

ByJohn R Bradley, John R Bradley

Analysis

Saudi: oddest ally Israel ever had

July 14, 2011 12:49
Soldiers from the Saudi-backed Gulf Co-operation Council, which helped put down the uprising Bahrain
2 min read

At first glance, the consequences for Israel do not look good six months after the Tunisian and Egyptian revolutions.

This week, an Egyptian pipeline supplying gas to the country was bombed for the fourth time, while hundreds of Tunisians rallied in response to a rumour that the interim regime there was planning to normalise ties with the Jewish state.

Radical Islamists opposed to Israel's existence are in the ascendancy in both countries, as well as in chaotic Yemen, and they are the most likely group to take over if the Assad regime falls in Syria.

Still, while rich in symbolism, in the great geopolitical scheme of things what Tunisia does or does not do vis-à-vis Israel, or indeed any other country, makes little difference to anything.