Daily Alert

Israel Is Committed to Maintaining the Status Quo on the Temple Mount

Violent events at Al-Aqsa Mosque during Ramadan led to a crisis of confidence with Jordan.
Share this
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meeting in Amman with King Abdullah II of Jordan
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meeting in Amman with King Abdullah II of Jordan. (Screengrab, YouTube)

Table of Contents

The violent events at the Al-Aqsa Mosque during the month of Ramadan led to the deterioration of relations between Israel and Jordan once again and a crisis of confidence on the part of Jordan.

Israel will try to restore relations with Jordan immediately after the Id al-Fitr holiday. Israeli political officials in Jerusalem emphasize that there will be no change in the status quo on the Temple Mount.

One of the critical tasks that Prime Minister Netanyahu will face in the coming weeks will be to try to reduce the tensions in relations between Israel and Jordan. The strains increased significantly during Ramadan following the violent events inside the Al-Aqsa Mosque on the Temple Mount. The police dispersed rioting teens with force, in full view of the cameras. Palestinian youths who had barricaded themselves inside the mosque were planning to attack the police and Jews visiting the Temple Mount.

In January 2023, Prime Minister Netanyahu flew to Jordan immediately after taking office and met with King Abdullah of Jordan. At the center of the conversation was the issue of the security situation on the Temple Mount and the royal demand to maintain Jordan’s position as the guardian of the holy places in Jerusalem, as required by the peace agreement between the two countries. Netanyahu promised the King of Jordan to fully maintain the status quo on the Temple Mount.

During the month of Ramadan, there was a deterioration in Jordan’s relations with Israel following the violent events on the Temple Mount. As expressed in Jordan’s diplomatic rhetoric towards Israel, the Jordanians saw the Israeli activity as a violation of Jordan’s position as the guardian of the holy places in Jerusalem and an attempt to impose a division of the Temple Mount between Muslims and Jews as was done at the Cave of the Patriarchs and Matriarchs in Hebron in 1994.

Jordanian sources say that the worsening of the official diplomatic rhetoric against Israel came at the orders of King Abdullah to contain the great anger on the Jordanian street and in the parliament toward the Jordanian government for not taking stronger measures with Israel or expelling the Israeli ambassador from Amman.

The Jordanian government strongly condemned Israel for what happened on the Temple Mount and accused it of escalation. Jordan initiated an emergency meeting of the Arab League and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation to discuss what was happening on the Temple Mount and in eastern Jerusalem.

Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman al-Safadi stated that there would be no peace in the region if the Palestinian people did not receive their rights. He emphasized that Jordan would not give up and would not conduct any negotiations on its position as guardian of the holy places in Jerusalem.

Al-Jazeera reported that Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman al-Safadi refused three times to receive phone calls from Israeli officials during the crisis at the Al-Aqsa Mosque. He also rejected a request from Israel conveyed to him through an intermediary that the Jordanian Waqf on the Temple Mount would assist in evacuating Palestinians who barricaded themselves in the Al-Aqsa Mosque one night.

Senior Israeli officials accuse the Jordanian foreign minister of being a force behind the worsening relations between the Hashemite Kingdom and Israel and of displaying an anti-Israel stance, perhaps to promote himself to the position of prime minister in the future.

About 70 percent of Jordan’s population is of Palestinian origin, and every event on the Temple Mount provokes them and is exploited by Islamic elements to incite against Israel.

The Biden administration made a political effort in preparation for Ramadan and initiated two security meetings in Aqaba, Jordan, and Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, with the participation of representatives of the United States, Israel, the Palestinian Authority, Jordan, and Egypt to try and maintain calm during the month of Ramadan, but it failed in its mission.

The United States acted in the United Nations to block the passage of an anti-Israel statement by the Security Council on the situation on the Temple Mount. Political officials in Jerusalem accused the Waqf on the Temple Mount, which is subordinate to the Jordanian government, of failing in its duty and not cooperating with Israeli efforts to prevent the provocations and violence of Palestinian youth on the Temple Mount.

Senior political figures stress that Israel has no interest in worsening relations with Jordan, with whom it has a peace agreement. Prime Minister Netanyahu will work to calm tensions between the two countries after Ramadan.

The Biden administration is also pressuring the Hashemite royal house to moderate its public statements against Israel and return to calmer relations.

A senior political official emphasized that Prime Minister Netanyahu’s promise to King Abdullah of Jordan stands and that Israel will not harm the status quo on the Temple Mount.

Share this

Subscribe to Daily Alert

The Daily Alert – Israel news digest appears every Sunday, Tuesday, and Thursday.

Related Items

Stay Informed, Always

Get the latest news, insights, and updates directly in your inbox—be the first to know!







Notifications

The Jerusalem Center
Israeli Embassy in London Was the Target of Foiled Iranian Terror Plot

The Israeli Embassy in London was the target of a terror plot by five Iranian nationals who were arrested by British police last weekend, according to people familiar with the matter. The five men were detained on Saturday on suspicion of preparing a terrorist act, in an operation led by the Metropolitan Police’s Counter Terror Command.

4:31pm
The Jerusalem Center
Biden’s Gaza Humanitarian Aid Pier Injured Far More US Service Members Than Previously Reported

Over 60 U.S. military personnel were injured and one killed during the construction and deployment of former President Joe Biden’s humanitarian aid pier off the coast of Gaza, indicating that the failed project was more dangerous than previously believed, according to a new report released by the Pentagon Inspector General on Tuesday.

4:30pm
The Jerusalem Center
Syrian Leader Says Country Has Held Indirect Talks with Israel

President Ahmed al-Shara of Syria said on Wednesday that Syria had held indirect talks with Israel to contain escalating tensions, days after Israeli jets struck the capital, Damascus, amid deepening sectarian violence inside the country.

4:29pm
The Jerusalem Center
Marco Rubio To Close State Department’s De Facto Palestinian Embassy

Secretary of State Marco Rubio will dissolve the State Department’s Office of Palestinian Affairs (OPA), a Biden-era creation that elevated relations with the Palestinian Authority. In the early hours of Hamas’s October 7 attack, the OPA called on Israel to stand down and forgo any retaliation.

4:27pm
The Jerusalem Center
Houthis say U.S. “Backed Down” and Israel Not Covered by Ceasefire

A senior Houthi official has rejected U.S. President Donald Trump’s claim the Yemeni armed group “capitulated” when agreeing a ceasefire deal, saying the U.S. “backed down” instead.

4:21pm
The Jerusalem Center
Vice President Vance: Iran Can Have “Civil Nuclear Power” but No Weapon

Vice President JD Vance said at a conference in Washington on Wednesday that Iran can have a “civil nuclear program” but not a “nuclear weapons program,” offering yet another confusing signal about the Trump administration’s position on Iran’s nuclear capabilities as negotiations with the Islamic Republic are set to enter their fourth round.

4:16pm

Close