Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Dubai deputy police chief: Iran and Turkey, not Israel, threaten the Gulf states

“Iran has three options: financial collapse, peace with Israel or the fall of the regime,” says Dubai Deputy Police Chief Dhahi Khalfan Tamim.

Dubai Deputy Police Chief Lt. Gen. Dhahi Khalfan Tamim, June 25, 2020. Photo: Hamdan bin Mohammed Smart University via Wikimedia Commons.
Dubai Deputy Police Chief Lt. Gen. Dhahi Khalfan Tamim, June 25, 2020. Photo: Hamdan bin Mohammed Smart University via Wikimedia Commons.

Dubai Deputy Police Chief Lt. Gen. Dhahi Khalfan Tamim said on Tuesday that the normalization agreement between Israel and the United Arab Emirates is good for regional stability and security.

“Israel never threatened us. [Turkish President Recep Tayyip] Erdoğan did. Iran is threatening us,” Tamim told Kuwait’s Diwan Al-Mullah Online TV.

The Turkish leader’s claims to be a champion of the Palestinians were a sham, said Tamim. Erdoğan is “peddling in the Palestinian cause—nothing more, nothing less,” he said.

Tamim also questioned why any government should require Palestinian approval to sign a peace treaty.

“Is it conceivable that the decision of heads of state to sign or not sign an agreement with a certain country would depend on the approval of [Palestinian Authority leader] Mahmoud Abbas? Is it conceivable that a president or a prime minister would pin their [decision] on Mahmoud Abbas? Abbas himself is incapable of making a decision to resolve the [Palestinian] cause, or to negotiate whether to move forward or backward,” he said.

“If Abbas were a worthy leader, he would have resolved the Palestinian problem or resigned,” added Tamim.

Tamim went on to say that it was not only the leaders, but also the public in the Gulf states that was dissatisfied with the Palestinians. How could public opinion in the Gulf states be expected to favor Palestinians when they pray for the destruction of these countries in their mosques? he asked.

He then addressed Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh directly, saying, “Haniyeh, when you are being hostile to Saudi Arabia and open your arms to Iran, who do you think you are? Go to Iran and let them help you. Go to hell!”

Iran has three choices, all of which lead to Tel Aviv, he said.

“It can die economically, or it can sign a peace agreement with Israel and coexist with the region,” said Tamim. “The third option is the fall of the regime of the mullahs.”

President Donald Trump earlier said that the Jewish state would not exist without the United States.
“It is a big problem if she is making these kinds of statements while officially representing the E.U. on the world stage,” said one E.U. diplomat, according to Euractiv.
The U.S. president told reporters that he intends to read his agreement with the Iranian regime “word by word” publicly to set the record straight.
“When you have something saying you can’t go to someone who uses divination, or a witch, or consults spirits, or a wizard, or a necromancer, that means this is something people were doing,” Eddy Portnoy, the curator, told JNS.
“No family should have to fight this hard to ensure a Jewish child’s safety at school,” James Pasch, vice president of litigation for the ADL, stated.
The partnership is an “indication that elected officials are taking seriously the unprecedented increase in anti-Jewish incidents occurring in schools across our country,” Brandy Shufutinsky of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies told JNS.