The Arab Crisis and the Race Towards Normalization Contexts and Repercussions

Abstract

Abstract: This research studies the motives and contexts that led to the announcement of the Emirati-Bahraini normalization agreement with Israel and its repercussions on the Gulf states, Iran, and the Palestinian cause as a whole. As this event represented a major turning point in the forms of relations and alliances existing in the Middle East.In this research, we will also seek to raise a number of problems that the topic of our research will arouse theoretically and practically, and accordingly we raise the following problematic questions:What are the contexts and outcomes of the UAE-Bahrain agreement with Israel?What are the implications of this agreement on the Palestinian issue and on the Gulf states?How did this normalization contribute to deepening the state crisis in our Arab world?Will this lead to a review of Arab nationalist thought?These are problems aimed at addressing a research hypothesis related to the implications of the normalization agreement and its repercussions on the Middle East region, as there is practical value to research the potential future effects of this announcement, in order to understand the dimensions of the decisions taken in the present, to diagnose threats and opportunities, as well as to anticipate the future.In order for the research treatment to gain its feasibility, we combined three methodological phases, a descriptive phases concerned with reviewing a set of ideas, and an analytical one that understood their backgrounds, stakes and similar debates, then a critical development that showed the error of some of the sayings and scenarios and monitors their theoretical and practical paradox.