Arab News

UAE and Israel leaders hold post-accord phone talks

- Reuters Jerusalem

Israel’s Cabinet approved a normalizat­ion deal with the UAE on Monday and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he and Abu Dhabi’s crown prince had spoken and agreed to meet soon. The US-brokered “treaty of peace” establishi­ng full relations with the Gulf country broke new diplomatic ground in the region, where concern over Iran is high, even as Palestinia­ns condemned the pact as betrayal of their quest for statehood in Israeli- occupied land.

Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan tweeted on Monday that he and Netanyahu had discussed strengthen­ing bilateral ties and the prospects for peace in the area. In an official statement that coincided with an Israeli Cabinet vote approving the Sept. 15 agreement with the UAE, Netanyahu said he and Sheikh Mohammed would meet soon.

“At the weekend, I spoke with my friend, the crown prince ... and

invited him to visit Israel,” Netanyahu said.

“He invited me to visit Abu Dhabi. But first, we will see a UAE delegation here and another one of our delegation­s will go there.” A source familiar with plans for the delegation­s’ visits said Israeli representa­tives accompanie­d by US officials will fly to Bahrain on Oct. 18 and travel on to the UAE the next day before returning to Israel with a UAE team on Oct. 20. Commenting on his conversati­on with Sheikh Mohammed, Netanyahu said: “We spoke about cooperatio­n that we are promoting in investment, tourism, energy, technology and other spheres.”

In a sign of burgeoning IsraelUAE cooperatio­n, a ship from the UAE docked on Monday at Israel’s port of Haifa, carrying a cargo of 15 containers along a shipping line between India, the UAE, Israel and the US.

While the normalizat­ion accord has already inspired commercial deal-making with the Gulf ’s trade, finance, tourism and travel hub, Israeli officials have objected to the UAE’s potential purchase of US-made F-35 stealth fighter jets in a separate side deal.

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