ELNET

Seventh EU-Israel Strategic Dialogue

The European Leadership Network (ELNET) and ELNET’s Forum of Strategic Dialogue (FSD), together with the Delegation of the EU to Israel, gathered 32 senior policymakers and experts from the EU and Israel to discuss the geopolitical implications of the Ukraine-Russia war; challenges and opportunities in the Middle East; and prospects for deepening the EU-Israel relationship. The discussions were conducted under strict Chatham House Rule, meaning no quotation or attribution.

Keynote speakers included MEP Antonio López-Istúriz White, Chair of the European Parliament Delegation for the Relations with Israel and Member of the Foreign Affairs and Security and Defence committees; and Lt. Gen. (ret.) Moshe Ya’alon, Former Vice Prime Minister and Minister of Defense.

The dialogue was chaired by Maj. Gen. (ret.) Amos Yadlin, Chair, ELNET’s Forum of Strategic Dialogue; Senior Fellow, Harvard Kennedy School Belfer Center; former Head of Israel’s Military Intelligence; former Director, INSS. Participants included senior officials from the European External Action Service, the European Commission, NATO, the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Defense, the Israel Defense Forces, Israel’s National Security Council, and Prime Minister’s Office, politicians, as well as former officials, experts, journalists, and civil society representatives from Europe and Israel.

The dialogue was preceded by a special dinner on “Abraham Accords, relations with Egypt, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and the role of the EU” with the ambassadors of the UAE and Egypt in Israel, the Head of Liaison Office of Morocco in Israel, and Gilead Sher, Senior Fellow, Rice University’s Baker Institute. After the dialogue, the EU participants also received a briefing on Israel’s fifth election by Dr. Emmanuel Navon.

Below is a summary of the topics addressed:

Geopolitical turmoil and instability

Challenges and opportunities in the Middle East

Prospects for the further deepening of the EU-Israel partnership

Conclusions and Recommendations

✓The EU and Israel should develop Partnership Priorities to guide their enhanced cooperation, including in the fields of: defense and security; climate change; cyber threats; global health; and defense of democracy against radicalism, authoritarianism, populism and violence. The parties should work to overcome the barriers to agreeing Israeli participation in Creative Europe.
✓ Israel can be an important partner to the EU and its members as they expand and upgrade their defense capabilities in light of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
✓ In parallel, the parties should establish a structured strategic foresight dialogue to develop shared proposals to shape medium and long-term trends.
✓ Israel and the EU should further consider how to harness the opportunities of Israeli-Arab normalization, especially in the fields of energy, the green transition, water, and food security.
✓ Regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, cooperation should focus on maintaining the viability of a two-state solution in a political context in which a conflict ending agreement is currently impossible. This should include addressing the stability of the PA, the question of transition from the leadership of Abbas, and investment in the Palestinian economy.
✓ The acute crisis in Europe should not distract from the Iranian nuclear threat. Some Israelis propose that Europeans should threaten to make use of the “snapback” mechanism in the JCPOA.
✓ Israelis and Europeans should work to improve the perception of the EU in Israel by drawing more attention to the depth of cooperation including in trade, research, transport, and security.

 

Strategic Dialogues offer the opportunity for parliamentarians, opinion formers and academics to engage and share knowledge on some of the most important challenges facing Europe and Israel and indeed globally. Discussions are of great value, candid and held under Chatham House rules.

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