Top UAE and Israeli defense officials on Tuesday held their first publicly-acknowledged phone call since their countries' agreement to normalize ties, officials said, heralding possible security cooperation.
The conversation between Defense Minister Benny Gantz and his Emirati counterpart Mohammed al-Bawardi came amid Israeli dissent at the prospect that the US-brokered deal could grant the Gulf power access to advanced weaponry previously denied to it, such as F-35 stealth fighter jets.
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In their 10-minute call, Bawardi and Gantz discussed boosting communication "for the benefit of their countries in particular and the region as a whole," a statement carried by UAE state news agency WAM said.
Gantz's office quoted him as saying that they agreed to "keep an open channel between them."
"We share important security interests, [and] collaboration will strengthen regional stability," a statement from Gantz's office said.
The normalization accord announced on Aug. 13, forges a new axis in confronting Shi'ite Muslim Iran and Sunni Islamist militants in the Middle East, and makes the UAE the third Arab country to forge ties with Israel in more than 70 years.
But the UAE has argued that the agreement should remove "any hurdle" to advanced US weapons sales, arguing that it eliminates any potential for belligerence between it and Israel.
A senior US State Department official said that "it makes perfect sense for us to be strengthening [the] UAE's defense capabilities at a time when they're under new threats for agreeing (to) peace with Israel," citing potential threats from Iran.
Seeking to allay Israeli security concerns, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo reassured Israel on Monday that it would retain a military advantage in the region under any future arms deals with the UAE.
An Israeli defense official said that while Israel was firm in opposing any prospective US sale of the F-35 to the UAE, the Netanyahu government was "entirely immersed" on the question of expanding criteria for Israeli defense exports to the Gulf power.
According to defense industry sources, Israel has sold the UAE security products in the cyber and surveillance realm. A study by the University of Toronto's Citizen Lab has linked spyware technologies produced by Israel's NSO Group to political surveillance in the UAE.
In the early 2000s, Israel was in talks to sell the UAE drones, according to a US official who was involved in the negotiations - but called off the deal after the 2010 death in Dubai of an arms dealer connected to the Islamist group Hamas, which Emirati authorities blamed on a Mossad hit team.
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