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Abraham Accords diplomats to meet in Bahrain after Israel meeting

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Diplomats from the United States, Israel and four Arab countries will convene in Bahrain Monday, Israeli officials said, three months after they vowed to boost cooperation at a landmark meeting in Israel.

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The talks in the Bahraini capital Manama will bring together foreign ministry officials from the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco — which all normalized ties with Israel in 2020 — and from Egypt, which made peace with Israel in 1979.

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In March, they met for the first time on Israeli soil in the Sde Boker kibbutz in the Negev desert, with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken joining his counterparts.

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The UAE and Bahrain forged ties with Israel under the Abraham Accords, brokered by former US President Donald Trump. Morocco then re-established relations with Israel under a separate Trump-brokered agreement.

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The Abraham Accords infuriated the Palestinians, who argued that they marked a betrayal of a decades-old Arab consensus to isolate Israel until it agrees to the establishment of a Palestinian state, with its capital in east Jerusalem.

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Washington has said it wanted the meeting to be annual and to include the Palestinian Authority and Jordan — another Arab nation that recognizes Israel, but which has seen rising criticism over the status of Jerusalem.

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Blinken has voiced strong support for the Abraham Accords but cautioned at the Negev meeting that they cannot replace Israeli-Palestinian peace-building.

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The meetings aim to deepen cooperation on areas including water, tourism, health, energy, food security and on regional security.

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Israel has also found common cause with Gulf Arab states in their tense relationship with Iran.

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Monday’s “meeting will also serve as a milestone ahead of the US president’s expected visit to the Middle East,” the Israeli foreign ministry said in a statement.

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President Joe Biden will travel to Israel, the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Saudi Arabia from July 13 to 16 — his first trip to the Middle East since taking office.

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Once there, he will attend a Gulf Cooperation Council summit with leaders from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait and Oman, joined by the leaders of Egypt, Iraq and Jordan, a US official said.

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