Breaking Longtime Taboo, UAE and Bahrain Sign Trump-brokered Deals With Israel
Breaking Longtime Taboo, UAE and Bahrain Sign Trump-brokered Deals With Israel
The Israeli leader signed bilateral accords at the White House with UAE Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Nahyan and Bahrain Foreign Minister Abdullatif al-Zayani, and all three leaders signed a joint declaration along with Trump.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Tuesday signed landmark accords normalizing the Jewish state’s relations with the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, as part of a peace push brokered by US President Donald Trump.

The Israeli leader signed bilateral accords at the White House with UAE Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Nahyan and Bahrain Foreign Minister Abdullatif al-Zayani, and all three leaders signed a joint declaration along with Trump.

The deals, denounced by the Palestinians, make them the third and fourth Arab states to take such steps to normalize ties since Israel signed peace treaties with Egypt in 1979 and Jordan in 1994.

Meeting Netanyahu earlier in the Oval Office, Trump said, “We’ll have at least five or six countries coming along very quickly” to forge their own accords with Israel. But he did not name any of the nations involved in such talks.

Speaking from the White House balcony, Trump said: “We’re here this afternoon to change the course of history.” Flags of the United States, Israel, the UAE and Bahrain were in abundance.

He called it “a major stride in which people of all faiths and backgrounds live together in peace and prosperity” and declared that the three Middle East countries “are going to work together, they are friends.”

The back-to-back agreements mark an improbable diplomatic victory for Trump. He has spent his presidency forecasting deals on such intractable problems as North Korea’s nuclear program only to find actual achievements elusive.

Bringing Israel, the UAE and Bahrain together reflects their shared concern about Iran’s rising influence in the region and development of ballistic missiles. Iran has been critical of both deals.

But in a sign that regional strife is sure to continue while the Israeli-Palestinian conflict remains unresolved, sirens warning of rocket fire from Gaza sounded in southern Israel on Tuesday as a ceremony was under way in Washington.

(With inputs from AFP, Reuters)

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