Thursday’s announcement of a “historic peace agreement” between Israel and the United Arab Emirates–the first deal to normalize relations between Israel and an Arab nation brokered by the U.S. in over a quarter-century–is more evidence that President Donald Trump is the first president in a long time to get U.S. Middle East policy more right than wrong.
Under the agreement, Israel and the UAE will establish “full normalization of relations,” including diplomatic relations with the opening of embassies, trade, tourism, direct flights, and other agreements. The only two other Arab nations that have diplomatic relations with Israel are Egypt and Jordan.
In a major concession, Israel will “suspend declaring sovereignty” over portions of the West Bank that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had planned to annex “and focus its efforts now on expanding ties with other countries in the Arab and Muslim World,” according to a joint statement issue by Trump, Netanyahu, and the leaders of the UAE.
Here’s the history of U.S. Middle East policy in the 21st century so far:
More
2 comments:
Obama signaled his Middle East allegiances early on with that deep bow.
What Middle East policy? He hasn't done anything besides move the embassy and pal around with Netanyahu.
Post a Comment