Netanyahu Claims UAE Deal Did Not Change Israeli Policy About US Arms Sales

The U.S. Embassy located in Jerusalem and the representatives of the UAE government did not immediately respond to requests for comment

Israel has not lessened its opposition to any US arms sales to the UAE that can destroy its military superiority as a part of the US-brokered normalization of their ties, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office mentioned on Tuesday.

The statement comes after a report in Israel's Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper that the Trump administration had planned a huge sale of advanced F-35 jets to UAE as a part of the Gulf nation's move last week to normalize ties with Israel.

Netanyahu on UAE Arms Sales

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The U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem and representatives of the UAE government did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Under understandings dating back decades, Washington has refrained from Middle East arms sales that could blunt Israel's "qualitative military edge" (QME). This has applied to the F-35, denied to Arab states, while Israel has bought and deployed it.

"In the talks (on the UAE normalization deal), Israel did not change its consistent positions against the sale to any country in the Middle East of weapons and defence technologies that could tip the (military) balance," Netanyahu's office said. The Trump administration has signaled that UAE could clinch unspecified new U.S. arms sales after last Thursday's normalization announcement.

Intelligence Minister Eli Cohen, an observer in Netanyahu's security cabinet, said the decision-making forum had held no discussion about any changes to QME policy and that Israel had not agreed to any changes by the United States. "Israel has not given its consent to coming along and changing the arrangement," Cohen told public radio station Kan.

(With agency inputs)

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