Kremlin silent on Netanyahu’s Middle East security pact proposal

Russian FM Dmitry Peskov says necessary to understand details of Israeli PM's reasoning before concluding anything

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends President Putin's annual press conference in Moscow, Russia December 14, 2023. PHOTO: REUTERS

MOSCOW:

The Kremlin on Thursday refrained from commenting on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s proposal to create a security pact in the Middle East, which he dubbed as the "Abraham Alliance."

“It is necessary to understand the details of Mr Netanyahu’s reasoning before concluding anything,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters in a press briefing in response to a question on the Israeli premier’s initiative.

During an address before a joint session of the US Congress on Wednesday, Netanyahu said such an alliance would be a "natural extension" of normalisation agreements known as the "Abraham Accords" that Israel brokered with Arab states during the Trump administration.

Re-emphasising the need to understand the details of the proposal, Peskov further said NATO “has a pronounced and systemic confrontational orientation.” “Do we need confrontational mechanisms in the Middle East? Hardly,” he added.

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