BRUSSELS: Avoiding a “general conflagration” in the Middle East will be top of the agenda when European Union and Gulf leaders meet in Brussels this week, European officials said on Tuesday. Heads of state and government from six Gulf countries - Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates - are expected to attend the first summit on Wednesday with their EU counterparts in the Belgian capital. Trade, energy and climate change are among issues on the table. But conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon, and the risk of a broader regional war are expected to be “the main topic”, EU officials said.

“One of the objectives is to avoid a general conflagration,” one official said. “Both sides are worried about this.” The 27-nation EU is seeking to foster closer ties with countries from the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). The EU is the second-largest trading partner for GCC countries but talks on a trade pact have languished for years and differences also remain on other subjects, including the war in Ukraine. “We see much more eye-to-eye on the Middle East,” another official said. “We want - both the EU and the GCC - stability in the region, de-escalation.” The talks come amid escalating Zionist attacks it says are targeting Hezbollah militants in Lebanon. Hezbollah had been exchanging cross-border fire with Zionists for almost a year, saying it is acting in response to devastating ground and air assault on Gaza.

The near-daily exchange of fire across the Lebanon border led to the displacement of tens of thousands of people on both sides even before the dramatic escalation last month, when Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to crush Hezbollah. European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen and top EU diplomat Josep Borrell will participate in the EU-GCC meeting, along with the heads of the EU’s 27 nations, ahead of a European Union leaders’ summit on Thursday. — AFP (See Page 2)

It was not clear which GCC leaders will travel to Brussels but EU officials said the Gulf countries would be represented by their heads of state or government. The EU has called for a ceasefire in Lebanon and Gaza. Traditionally Western allies, the resource-rich Gulf monarchies have grown closer to Iran, which backs Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon. They have repeatedly called for the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Zionist entity, with some playing a key role in negotiations to secure a ceasefire in Gaza.- AFP (See Page 2)