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Opinion

Libyans set fire to any hope of Israel breakthrough deal

The meeting between Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen and Libya's Najila el-Mangoush is yet another illustration of the dysfunctionality of Israeli governance

August 31, 2023 09:52
Angry protests in Libya, Tripoli, GettyImages-1628189831
Libyans burn tyres as they protest in Tripoli on August 28, 2023, following an informal meeting between the country's foreign minister and her Israeli counterpart. The leader of Libya's government said that he had suspended his foreign minister after her Israeli counterpart announced he had held talks with her last week in Rome. (Photo by Mahmud TURKIA / AFP) (Photo by MAHMUD TURKIA/AFP via Getty Images)
5 min read

The meeting between Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen and his Libyan counterpart Najila el-Mangoush last week in Rome is unlikely to go down in history as a breakthrough in the relations between Israel and the Arab world.

On the face of it, such a meeting could and should have been a pivotal moment. Instead, it will become yet another illustration of the dysfunctionality of Israeli governance.

We may have to wait until one of the main actors writes their memoirs. Perhaps Ms El-Mangoush, who has now lost her job and been forced into exile, will use her unexpected free time to write one. But until then, we can look at the changes in the Israeli narrative over 36 hours to get some kind of idea.

It began with a lengthy press release last Sunday afternoon in which Cohen extolled the “historic meeting” which was “a first step in the ties between Israel and Libya”, in which they had discussed “possibilities of cooperation between the countries and the preservation of Jewish culture in Libya”.

But then came the pushback from Tripoli in the shape of a statement saying that the meeting was “unplanned” and had not “included any discussions, agreements or consultation”.

This was followed by rioting on the streets and El-Mangoush, who had already been suspended by her prime minister, fleeing the country shortly after midnight on a government plane.

The next stage in the narrative was frantic briefing early on Monday morning from the foreign ministry that both sides had agreed that the meeting was to be publicly acknowledged.

But if this was indeed the case (and it seems unlikely, as the Libyan government could have easily anticipated the anger on the streets), then why did Cohen’s office put out another statement later on Monday saying that “the leak on the meeting with Libya’s foreign minister did not come from the foreign ministry or the office of the foreign minister”? Either they had agreed to publicise or there had been a leak.