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JERUSALEM (AP) — It had all the ingredients of a political brawl: a Jordanian and an Israeli lawmaker, both known for attention-seeking bluster, challenged each other to a showdown Wednesday on the border between their two countries.
Everyone expected a fist fight — or at least a shouting match.
Israel's Oren Hazan and Jordan's Yehiya al-Saoud were each already on their way to the border crossing on Allenby Bridge on the River Jordan when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered the Israeli lawmaker to stand down.
The showdown was averted but the hyperbole from both sides reflects heightened diplomatic tensions between Israel and Jordan over the escalation around a contested Jerusalem shrine and over last month's deadly shooting at the Israeli Embassy in Amman.
Israel and Jordan signed a peace treaty in 1994, but ties are often strained over Israeli-Palestinian flare-ups. There has also been widespread anger in Jordan over last month's deadly shooting in which an Israeli Embassy guard killed two Jordanians, including a 16-year-old. Authorities said the guard opened fire after the teen attacked him with a screwdriver during a furniture delivery.
Hazan and al-Saoud, both provocative politicians, had quarreled publicly in recent days, exchanging barbs through media statements.
Al-Saoud challenged Hazan to a faceoff at the Allenby Bridge crossing after the Israeli berated Jordan, claiming Israel always "protects their posterior, day and night. They need a little re-education."
Hazan picked up the gauntlet but struck a more jocular tone ahead of the rendezvous, posting photos of him getting a haircut and tweeting: "A gentleman is never late!"
He said he would meet al-Saoud and "make him an offer he can't refuse." His spokesman Daniel Zirlin said the meeting would be "non-violent" and would carry "a message of reconciliation and peace."
Al-Saoud struck a harsher tone, telling reporters on his way to the crossing that he was "serious about going to the bridge and beating up this dirty person."
"We want to tell Netanyahu that if the door to jihad (holy war) was open, the Jordanians would stomp on them (Israelis) with their shoes," al-Saoud said.
Hazan, who made headlines earlier this year when he snapped an unexpected selfie with President Donald Trump after he landed in Tel Aviv, was heading to the bridge on Wednesday morning when the prime minister's office called.
Israel's Channel 2 TV facilitated a phone call between the two men Wednesday evening. Al-Saoud insisted Hazan first apologize to the Jordanian people before they talk, according to the stations translation. When that did not happen, al-Saoud said "go to hell" and hung up the phone.
Hazan said if they had met in person it would have "ended with a hug and a selfie."
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Associated Press writer Karin Laub in Amman, Jordan, contributed reporting.
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