Israel and Morocco have agreed to establish diplomatic
relations, US President Donald Trump announced on Thursday. Morocco became the
fourth Arab country to normalize ties with Israel in four months, following the
Abraham Accords with the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Sudan.
“Another historic
breakthrough today!” Trump tweeted. “Our two great friends Israel and the
Kingdom of Morocco have agreed to full diplomatic relations – a massive
breakthrough for peace in the Middle East!”
Israel and Morocco plan to reopen economic liaison
offices, which were closed in 2002, and work quickly to exchange ambassadors
and begin direct flights, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.
In addition, Trump announced that he signed a proclamation
recognizing Moroccan sovereignty over the Western Sahara, a disputed territory.
“Morocco’s serious, credible, and realistic autonomy proposal is the only basis
for a just and lasting solution for enduring peace and prosperity!” he tweeted.
“Morocco recognized the United States in 1777. It is
thus fitting we recognize their sovereignty over the Western Sahara,” Trump
added. No other UN member states recognize Western Sahara as part of Morocco.
The Trump administration viewed finalizing establishment of
ties between the two countries as a prime goal in the past few weeks.
White House Senior Adviser Jared Kushner said normalization
“comes on the heels of four years of very, very hard work and very intense
diplomacy.”
"The team, led by Jared Kushner, has worked on this
deal for over a year," Avi Berkowitz, Special Representative for International
Negotiations, who took part in negotiating the normalization agreement, told
The Jerusalem Post. He added that he hopes that the deal will lead to a warm
peace between the two countries.
The move is the culmination of a successful year of upgrading
Israel’s relations with Arab and Muslim countries, beginning with Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visiting Chad and meeting Sudan’s leader in Uganda,
the Abraham Accords, as well as the warming relations and cooperation with
Saudi Arabia, in addition to a number of other Arab states.
Early this year, as reported in Israeli media, Israel
proposed a scenario to the White House similar to what has unfolded, that
normalization of relations with Morocco would come in conjunction with American
recognition of the Western Sahara.
French media reported that Morocco purchased three drones
from Israel for $48 million in January. Like other Gulf States, Morocco views
Iran as a threat. Rabat cut ties with Tehran in 2018, because Iran funded
Western Sahara separatist movement Polisario via Hezbollah.
Long before that, Morocco had a relationship with Israeli
intelligence agencies. Moroccan King Hassan II gave Israel recordings of an
Arab League meeting that helped Israel prepare for the Six Day War in 1967,
according to former IDF intelligence chief Shlomo Gazit and the former
intelligence officer and cabinet minister Rafi Eitan. That same year, the
Mossad helped Morocco abduct a dissident from France.
Netanyahus focused on the many Israelis of Moroccan origin and
not security matters in his remarks on normalization, which he called a “great
light of peace” in honor of Hanukkah.
“Everyone knows the warm ties of the kings of Morocco and
the Moroccan people to the Jewish community there,” Netanyahu said. “Hundreds
of thousands of Jews moved to Israel from Morocco and they form a living bridge
between the people of Morocco and Israel. This solid base is the foundation on
which we build this peace.”
Trump’s proclamation said the US “affirms, as stated by
previous Administrations, its support for Morocco’s autonomy proposal as the
only basis for a just and lasting solution to the dispute over the Western
Sahara territory…An independent Sahrawi State is not a realistic option for
resolving the conflict and that genuine autonomy under Moroccan sovereignty is
the only feasible solution.”
“Therefore, as of today, the United States recognizes
Moroccan sovereignty over the entire Western Sahara territory.”
The White House also urged the sides in the Western Sahara
conflict to return to the negotiating table under the framework of Morocco’s
plan for autonomy for the Sahrawi people of Western Sahara.
The US plans to open a consulate in Dakhla, in Western
Sahara, which the Moroccan Foreign Ministry said would have “a primarily economic
vocation.”
Kushner said recognizing Moroccan sovereignty in the Western
Sahara was “something that seemed inevitable at this point; is something that
we think advances the region and helps bring more clarity to where things are
going.”
Following the announcement, President Trump spoke with King
Mohammed VI of Morocco. According to a readout provided by the White House,
“the leaders discussed cooperation in the fight against the coronavirus, ways
to minimize its economic impact, and common interests in critical regional
issues.”
“During the conversation the King agreed to resume
diplomatic relations between Morocco and Israel and expand economic and
cultural cooperation to advance regional stability,” the White House said in a
statement.
King Mohammed told Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in a
phone call on Thursday that Rabat stands by a two-state solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a royal court statement said.
The king added that negotiations between Israel and the
Palestinians are the only way to reach a final, lasting and comprehensive
solution to the conflict.
King Mohammed also highlighted his commitment to a two-state
solution, as well as the importance of freedom of worship in Jerusalem, during
his conversation with Trump.
The White House, not Netanyahu, informed Foreign Minister
Gabi Ashkenazi and Defense Minister Benny Gantz of the developments with
Morocco several weeks before they were made public, contrary to the UAE,
Bahrain and Sudan deals in which they were told at the last minute.
Ashkenazi said “today is another great day for Israeli
diplomacy, a day of light befitting the holiday of Hanukkah.
“Renewing relations between Israel and the Kingdom of
Morocco is an important part of the Abraham Accords that reflects the deep and longstanding
friendship between the nations. I call on more nations to join the Abraham
Accords’ circle,” he stated.
Ashkenazi added that he would like to light Hanukkah candles
at the Israeli embassy in Rabat next year.
Ambassador to the UN Gilad Erdan invited Morocco’s envoy in
Turtle Bay to a Hanukkah candle-lighting ceremony.
Moroccan-born law professor Shimon Shetreet, a minister in
the governments of Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres, founding president of the
World Union of Sephardi Jews and a declared candidate in the race for 11th
president of the State of Israel, was delighted by the announcement, calling it
“a great blessing.”
He anticipated that Israelis of Moroccan background would be
happy over this development because “all Moroccan Jews have an emotional
attachment to what used to be their homeland.”
Morocco was open to Israeli visitors before the
normalization announcement, and Shetreet has led several delegations to
Morocco. If there is a rabbi with the delegation, he recites memorial prayers
in Hebrew for the King Hassan II who had been visited by both Rabin and Peres
and was on good terms with them.