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Biden administration is “positive and excited” about ties between Israel and the UAE, and the prospect of Israel establishing diplomatic relations with more Arab countries, Lapid said in a briefing with reporters accompanying him to Abu Dhabi.
However, two days after meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Rome, Lapid said Washington “says that [normalizations] require us to make an effort with the Palestinians,” contrary to the Trump administration, which “gave a sense that [the Abraham Accords] were instead of progress on the Palestinian front, or a way to prove it’s unnecessary.”
Lapid was skeptical about the chances of an agreement with the Palestinians.
“The Palestinians have to want progress themselves for someone to be able to help them, and that’s not the situation now in the Palestinian Authority or Hamas,” he said.
“Don’t shoot 4,000 rockets at Israelis if you want to get help,” Lapid said regarding reconstruction of the Gaza Strip.
The topic of the Palestinians came up in his meetings with Blinken and with bin Zayed, he said.
The Emiratis want to have a positive impact on the Palestinian issue, Lapid said, adding that he is sure they will be helpful if there is any possibility of progress.
Lapid said his meeting with bin Zayed revolved mostly around regional issues and US involvement in the Middle East, as well as expanding the Abraham Accords to other countries.
He expressed hope that more Arab countries will follow the UAE, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco in establishing relations with Israel, but naming them would hurt chances of it happening.
“There are other countries we talk to under the radar,” Lapid said. “The goal is to have relations with as many as possible.”
Israel needs to work to develop relations with Sudan, he said. Those ties have stalled since they were announced last year.
Lapid declined to answer questions about Iran while in the UAE, which views the Islamic Republic as an adversary but is less vocal than Israel about it.
He also hailed “the unusually large pile of economic agreements [between Israel and the UAE] happening quickly that will influence the lives of all Israelis” and will help Israel’s economy in a difficult time.
Lapid and bin Zayed signed an economic cooperation agreement at the end of their meeting.
Earlier Tuesday, at the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Israeli Embassy to the UAE, Lapid said: “Israel wants peace with all of its neighbors. We aren’t going anywhere. The Middle East is our home, and we’re here to stay, so we call on all countries in the region to recognize that and talk to us.”
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