Israeli-Arab relations

Israel says formal diplomatic ties with Bahrain to begin October 18

Agence France-Presse

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Israel says formal diplomatic ties with Bahrain to begin October 18
The Palestinians condemn the Gulf agreements with Israel as 'a stab in the back' for their aspirations to establish an independent state of their own

Israel and Bahrain will officially establish diplomatic relations on Sunday, October 18 at a ceremony in Manama, an Israeli official said, after the two states reached a US-brokered normalization deal last month. 

A visiting delegation from Israel and officials in Bahrain will sign a “joint communique (that) is the establishment of full diplomatic relations,” an Israel official in Manama told reporters. 

Once the text is signed at a ceremony scheduled for Sunday evening, Israel and Bahrain will be free to open embassies in each other’s countries, the official said. 

The United Arab Emirates and Bahrain became the third and fourth Arab states to agree to normalisz ties with Israel, following Egypt’s peace deal with Israel in 1979 and a 1994 pact with Jordan. 

Sunday’s meeting follows a September 15 ceremony at the White House when Israel, the UAE and Bahrain inked the so-called “Abraham Accords” brokered by President Donald Trump’s administration. 

US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and special assistant for international negotiations, Avi Berkowitz, are due in Bahrain for the ceremony. 

In addition to the joint communique establishing diplomatic ties, Israel and Bahrain are expected to sign “six to eight” memorandums of understanding, including on economic cooperation, the Israeli official said. 

The official said he could not outline the substance of all the agreements scheduled for signature on Sunday, but security cooperation is likely to feature prominently in bilateral talks. 

Earlier this month, Israel’s Mossad spy agency chief Yossi Cohen held talks in Bahrain with top security and intelligence officials on “topics of mutual interest,” according to the Bahrain News Agency.  

Significant shift

The Palestinians have condemned the Gulf agreements with Israel as “a stab in the back” for their aspirations to establish an independent state of their own.

The deals mark a distinct shift in a decades-old status quo where Arab countries have tried to maintain unity against Israel over its treatment of the stateless Palestinians.

Israel’s right-wing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insists that more Mideast states want ties with Israel as priorities have shifted, arguing that countries now value lucrative trade opportunities above the Palestinian conflict. 

But key player Saudi Arabia has said it will not follow its allies Bahrain and the UAE in establishing diplomatic relations without a resolution to the Palestinian issue.

Israel’s parliament on Thursday ratified the normalization agreement with the UAE.

A separate vote on the Bahrain pact is expected once the details are finalized.  – Rappler.com

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