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Opinion

It's a multi-trillion-dollar prize for Middle East and UK

Two years on from first Abraham Accords, peace dividend promises unimaginable rewards

August 11, 2022 13:46
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US President Joe Biden disembarks from his plane upon landing at Ben Gurion Airport in Lod near Tel Aviv, on July 13, 2022, as he starts his first tour of the Middle East since entering the White House last year. (Photo by JACK GUEZ / AFP) (Photo by JACK GUEZ/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

Joe Biden’s recent visit to the Middle East was an effort to reaffirm the US’s commitment to its allies in the region following years of perceived reorientation elsewhere. During his address to the Gulf Cooperation Council, he assured allies that the US would remain an active and engaged partner and “not walk away and leave a vacuum to be filled by China, Russia, or Iran”.

The UK also has a critical role to play in this.

While there may be a desire among some in the region to end dependence on the US and the West, recent Tony Blair Institute (TBI) polling suggests long-held ideas about hostility toward Western countries are unfounded. 72 per cent of people polled in Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Lebanon, Tunisia and Egypt view the US favourably, with 67 per cent feeling the same about the UK.

Not only is there a strategic need for the West to ensure adversaries do not fill a vacuum in its absence — the people there actually want partnership with the West.