Israeli president Isaac Herzog on a Presidential Visit to the United Arab Emirates, December 2022  Amos Ben Gershom
Palestine & Israel

UAE Rejects US-Led Gaza Force Over Legal Concerns

UAE Cites Legal Issues in Rejecting Gaza Stabilisation Force

Jummah

The United Arab Emirates has declared it will not participate in the proposed international stabilisation force for Gaza, citing a lack of clear legal and operational framework. This decision highlights significant Arab concerns that the US-led plan risks perpetuating the Israeli occupation rather than paving the way for Palestinian sovereignty .

Legal and Political Concerns

The announcement was made by Dr. Anwar Gargash, a diplomatic adviser to the UAE president, at the Abu Dhabi Strategic Debate. He stated that without a clear framework for the stability force, the UAE would not take part . This stance reflects deep-seated concerns about the force's legitimacy and purpose. International law explicitly forbids foreign troops from entering an occupied territory without explicit Palestinian consent; otherwise, the force would be seen as coercive and would effectively stabilise an unlawful Israeli occupation . The US draft resolution makes no reference to a Palestinian state or a two-state solution, which are central to the long-held positions of Arab nations . For the UAE, the Gaza peace plan, while "imperfect, but significant," must be a beginning that charts a "clear horizon towards a two-state solution" .

Regional Doubts

The UAE's refusal is part of a broader pattern of regional skepticism towards the proposed force. Key Arab and Muslim-majority countries have also expressed reservations or outright refused to participate under the current conditions . Jordan's King Abdullah of Jordan has stated that Jordanian troops will not join the force . While Turkey played a crucial role in negotiations and initially considered participating, Israel has adamantly ruled out accepting Turkish armed forces in Gaza . Once considered a potential contributor, Azerbaijan did not attend a planning meeting and said it would not contribute unless a full ceasefire was in place.
This growing list of rejections risks creating a security vacuum.

The Problematic Mandate of the Force

The US-drafted resolution proposes a force with a broad and controversial mandate, which is a key source of the objections. The draft defines the force's purpose as disarming Hamas and ensuring the "demilitarising the Gaza Strip," including the destruction of its military infrastructure . It would be authorised to "use all necessary measures", language that permits the use of force . Crucially, the force would not report to the United Nations but would be answerable to a "Board of Peace" chaired by former US President Donald Trump . This structure, combined with a mandate that potentially spills into governance, has led to fears that the force would act as an arm of the US and Israeli security policy rather than a neutral UN-backed entity .

The Abraham Accords

The UAE's decision occurs within the complex framework of its normalization with Israel under the Abraham Accords. Signed in 2020, the Accords were a landmark diplomatic achievement for the Trump administration, leading to peace agreements between Israel, the UAE, and Bahrain . However, analysts note that the Accords were largely a security compact that sidelined the Palestinian issue, offering Israel regional recognition without requiring it to relinquish occupied land or make concessions for Palestinian statehood . The Gaza conflict has intensified public sympathy for the Palestinian cause across the Arab world, increasing the political cost of normalization . By refusing to join the force without a clear path to Palestinian statehood, the UAE is signaling that even for Abraham Accords signatories, the Palestinian question remains a central and unresolved issue that cannot be bypassed .

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