Trump announces Israel-Morocco to normalize relations
Israel and Morocco have agreed to normalize
relations, President Donald Trump announced on Thursday, marking the fourth
Arab-Israel agreement in four months. As part of the deal, the U.S. will
recognize Morocco’s claim over the disputed Western Sahara region.
As his time in office winds down, Trump said Israel
and Morocco would restore diplomatic and other relations, including the
immediate reopening of liaison offices in Rabat and Tel Aviv and the eventual
opening of embassies. U.S. officials said it would also include joint
overflight rights for airlines.
The White House said Trump and Morocco’s King
Mohammed VI had agreed in a conversation that Morocco would “resume diplomatic
relations between Morocco and Israel and expand economic and cultural
cooperation to advance regional stability.”
The U.S. will also recognize the country’s claim
over Western Sahara, the former Spanish North African territory that has been a
long-running dispute that has confounded international negotiators for decades,
the White House said in a statement.
Morocco is the fourth Arab nation to recognize
Israel as the administration seeks to expand its “Abraham Accords” framework,
which began over the summer with an agreement between the Jewish state and the
United Arab Emirates.
Bahrain and Sudan have followed suit and
administration officials have also been trying to bring Saudi Arabia into the
grouping.
“The president reaffirmed his support for Morocco’s
serious, credible, and realistic autonomy proposal as the only basis for a just
and lasting solution to the dispute over the Western Sahara territory and as
such the president recognized Moroccan sovereignty over the entire Western
Sahara territory,” the White House said.



