The British newspaper, The Independent, said in a

report

that the Abraham agreements, which were concluded months ago between Arab countries and Israel, and which were welcomed a few months ago as pioneering peace agreements in the Middle East, appear today as a footnote in history, It is not worth the paper it was written on.

She explained that, a few months after a group of Arab countries normalized relations with Israel, these countries found themselves in an embarrassing position, and began to backtrack on that with the deterioration of Israel's reputation around the world.

Because of its attack on the Gaza Strip and its treatment of the Palestinians.

Morocco is holding back

In monitoring the facts of these countries' retreat, the newspaper said that a hypothetical meeting between the main union of Moroccan businessmen and the Federation of Israeli Chambers of Commerce was scheduled to take place, last Monday, to discuss business and investment opportunities in Israel, which had been postponed.

In addition, Morocco canceled a planned visit by Israeli officials this month to discuss direct flights between the two countries.

Politicians close to the ruling party with Islamic roots participated in protests calling for an end to normalization with Israel.

UAE

In the UAE, flights linking Tel Aviv with the two main cities in the UAE, which were the cornerstone of the Abraham Agreements, were suspended.

However, the newspaper says, the calculations may be different for the Emirates, which has a greater commitment to the normalization deal as a way to strengthen its ties with pro-Israel figures in Washington, and to secure access to advanced sensitive military and security technologies.

The report quoted Tamara Kaufman Waits, a former US State Department official who now works at the Brookings Institution, as saying that the UAE will not allow the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to impede its quest to strengthen ties with Israel.

Sudan

Likewise, in Sudan, where the authorities are subject to democratic accountability, according to the newspaper, the government is under popular pressure, as pro-Palestinian rallies erupted.

"What is happening in Gaza against defenseless civilians is regrettable, but normalization has nothing to do with the Palestinians' right to establish their state," the country's interim president, Abdel-Fattah al-Burhan, told France 24 news channel.

The printing press bought into chaos

The newspaper’s report quoted Tamara Waits as saying that the danger now is that the Arab countries, which printed with Israel, have bought up this mess, and now they have to live with it.

Andreas Craig, a specialist in Middle East affairs at King's College, was also quoted as saying that there is no indication that the Israeli attack on Hamas in Gaza or its treatment of the Palestinians raises major security concerns and destabilization of the Islamic world, as it has not faced - According to him - any country so far has made serious pressure to reduce relations with Israel;

But there are hints that these countries have other ideas about normalization.

The report indicated that analysts observed shifts in government positions on the conflict between the Palestinians and Israel.

This may increase Israeli pressure to end operations in Gaza, although this has so far been resisted.

Craig says that the normalization deals "need prostitutes, and they can be easily rejected if they are politically expensive, and if it turns out that there is movement on the street, they have an argument that they can state that this is just a piece of paper."