Netanyahu’s very consideration of the proposal, however, revealed the strategic importance of Oman’s role as a broker for Israel, the report added, citing four senior Israeli officials.
When Netanyahu returned to office in 2009, he issued a unilateral warning to Israeli security services to refrain from all forms of communication with Iran.
“Netanyahu’s national security adviser, told… his American counterpart Susan Rice… it was insulting that the U.S. thought Israel wouldn’t find out about the secret U.S.-Iran back channel in Oman.” https://t.co/jlVpjFyVWe
— Giorgio Cafiero (@GiorgioCafiero) February 2, 2020
According to the report, Israel was aware of back-channel negotiations between the US and Iran in Muscat, but recieved no prior heads up.
The talks were held under the auspices of then US President Barack Obama and yielded the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.
Security Advisor Amidor declared the Jewish State’s disapproval in a meeting with his US counterpart, Susan Rice, desribing the failure to share details of the plan as ‘insulting’.
Following Rouhani’s appointment in 2013, a figure who was widely expected to carve out a more progessive role for Iran in global affairs, the late Sultan Qaboos of Oman took the rare step of presenting Israel the prospect of joining Iran at the negotiating table.
The report also touched on the five decade-long discreet relations between the Sultanate of Oman and Israel, which it still does not formally recognise.
Oman’s ambassador was one of the three Arab envoys to the US (along with those of the UAE and Bahrain) who attended last Tuesday’s unveiling of the Trump administration peace plan.
Sultan Qaboos bin Said, who died last month, was the first Gulf leader to host a serving Israeli prime minister – Yitzhak Rabin in 1994 – one of the earliest steps in the region’s normalisation of relations with Israel.