Arab–Israeli relations

Arab–Israeli relations refers to relations between Israel and Arab nations. Israel's relations with the Arab world are overshadowed by the Arab–Israeli conflict and the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Israel has been at war with Arab states on several occasions. Furthermore, a large majority of states within the Arab League do not recognize Israel, and Israelis and Jews in general are considered a frequent target of antisemitism in the Arab world. After several Arab-Israeli wars, Egypt was the first Arab state to recognize Israel diplomatically in 1979 with the signing of the Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty. It was followed by Jordan with the Israel-Jordan Peace Treaty in 1994. In 2020, four more Arab states (the UAE, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan) normalized relations. There have also been talks of an emerging Arab–Israeli alliance against Iran.

Early history
The increased migration of Jews to Ottoman Palestine began in the late 19th century and occurred in several waves. The Ottomans were largely tolerant of Jews. By 1888, there were just under 24,000 Jews living in Palestine, compared to nearly 550,000 Arabs. The mastermind of political Zionism became Theodor Herzl, who published his book The Jewish State in 1896. Due to widespread discrimination against Jews, Herzl said there was a need for a homeland for the Jewish people, and in the book he suggested Argentina and Palestine, respectively, as possible locations for a Jewish state. Herzl, on the advice of other Zionists, chose Palestine and offered to help the Ottoman Sultan pay Ottoman national debts in return for land in Palestine, but the Sultan refused. After the defeat of the Ottomans in World War I (1914-1918), Palestine was administered by the British as the League of Nations Mandate for Palestine, and with the Balfour Declaration, Britain agreed to the eventual establishment of a "national home" for the Jewish people. The Zionists intensified their settlement activities and there was increased resistance from the Arab population, e.g., in the Jaffa riots (1921). With the Jewish Agency for Israel, founded in 1929, a quasi-governmental organization was formed to coordinate settlement activity, while the Arabs in Palestine remained less organized. After Adolf Hitler's rise to power in Germany, Jewish migration continued to increase and by 1945 there were over 500,000 Jews living in Palestine. The Arab leader Amin al-Husseini had close contacts with the Nazi regime and between 1936 and 1939 there was an Arab revolt in Palestine against Jewish immigrants and the British. After the end of World War II, many Holocaust survivors came to Palestine and the British prepared to withdraw from Palestine as their position in the region had become untenable. As a result, riots broke out between Jewish settlers and the Arab population. The United Nations adopted a partition plan for Palestine on November 29, 1947, which would have given the Arabs 42% of the land area of Palestine and established an international zone in Jerusalem. The partition plan was rejected by the Arab states and the Arabs in Palestine, while the Jews accepted it.

Founding of Israel and first Arab-Israeli war
After the partition plan was announced, fighting broke out between Arab militias (including the Holy War Army) and Jewish military organizations (including the Haganah). David Ben-Gurion finally announced Israel's declaration of independence on May 14, 1948. In response, a coalition of the Arab states of Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Iraq attacked the newly formed state. Despite the numerical superiority of the Arabs, they lost large areas to the Israelis such as the important port city of Haifa and by the end of the war Israel controlled 78% of the area of Palestine included in the original partition plan. The War ended with the 1949 Armistice Agreement, the conquered territories remained with Israel and the West Bank was occupied by Jordan and the Gaza Strip by Egypt. The war led to the expulsion of up to 700,000 Arabs from Israel and the conquered territories, who remained as refugees in neighboring Arab countries, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. In Israel, however, an Arab minority continued to exist thereafter and was granted civic rights. In the Arab countries, the defeat by Israel was perceived as a disaster and was called Nakba (النكبة 'the catastrophe'). A wave of anti-Semitism swept the Arab world and most Jews in Arab countries were forced to flee to Israel. In the following years, there were repeated Arab attacks on Israeli territory for the purpose of sabotage. Hundreds of Israelis were killed in the process.

Suez Crisis
The defeat in the first Arab-Israeli War had strengthened Arab nationalism, and in Egypt the nationalist Gamal Abdel Nasser came to power in 1952. He nationalized the Suez Canal, which had been owned by a Franco-British consortium, in July 1956. Because of the strategic importance of the Suez for international shipping, this was also a threat to Israel's national security. As a result, a British-French-Israeli military coalition occupied the Suez Canal. However, the Soviet Union and the United States opposed the occupation and threatened sanctions, so it had to be aborted and Nasser won a diplomatic victory that made him the political leader of the Arab world. Israel's position in the region remained precarious as a result. In response, Israel sought to establish close relations with the non-Arab states of the Near East, such as Turkey and Iran under Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Thus, clandestine military cooperation was arranged with Turkey in 1958. The United States continued to strive for good relations with the Arab states, even though John F. Kennedy first allowed arms shipments to Israel in 1962, which made possible the later military alliance between the two states. Concerned about its security, Israel began to intensify its nuclear weapons program in the 1960s.

Second Arab-Israeli War
After the Arab states were embroiled in an internal conflict between the revolutionary states of Egypt, Syria and Iraq and the conservative monarchies of Saudi Arabia and Jordan in the early 1960s, the situation for Israel intensified again in the mid-1960s. The militant Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) was founded in 1964 with Egyptian support. In 1965, clashes between Israel and Syria intensified as the Syrians supported guerrilla attacks on Israel. Egypt escalated the situation with false accusations that Israel was massing troops on its border with the country and closed the Strait of Tiran to Israeli ships. Mediation efforts by the major powers failed, and on June 5, 1967, Israel started the Six-Day War with a preemptive strike by the Israeli air force against Egyptian air bases to preempt a feared attack by Arab states. An attacking coalition of Egyptian, Jordanian and Syrian troops was defeated by Israel in a triumphant military strike in a very short time. In the process, Israel was able to conquer the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, the Golan Heights and the Sinai Peninsula. The Israelis then offered to return the Sinai and the Golan Heights in return for a peace treaty. The Arab states rejected the offer and passed the Khartoum Resolution on September 1, 1967. The resolution proclaimed the "three no's" (no peace, no negotiations, and no recognition) of the Arab states regarding Israel. Israel then began to build settlements in the conquered territories, which were illegal under international law, and denied political rights to the Palestinians in these territories. The PLO under Yasser Arafat and other militant groups began increasing terrorist attacks on Israeli targets, including airplane hijackings and the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre.

Yom Kippur War and Peace with Egypt
Egypt was not satisfied with the territorial status quo, and from 1968 onward there was an ongoing low-intensity conflict with Israel on the Sinai border. After diplomatic negotiations failed, Egypt under Anwar Sadat launched a surprise attack on Israel on the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur in October 1973, starting the Yom Kippur War. Syria joined the attack and attacked the Golan Heights, and other Arab states and the Soviet Union also supported the war. During the first two days, Egyptian and Syrian forces advanced, but after that the tide of the war turned in favor of the Israelis, who first had to mobilize their forces. The attack had taken the Israelis by surprise and, after two humiliating defeats, the war was seen as the Arabs' first military victory. Because of the U.S. support for Israel, the Arab states imposed an oil boycott against the West, which led to the 1973 oil crisis. After the Israelis began advancing toward the Nile Delta, a cease-fire agreement went into effect. As a result, protracted secret negotiations ensued between the U.S., Egypt and the Israelis for a peace agreement. In 1977, Sadat visited Israel and addressed the Knesset in a historic state visit by an Arab head of state. A year later, mediated by U.S. President Jimmy Carter, the Camp David Accords were concluded, in which Israel declared that it would recognize Palestinian rights and give autonomy to the Palestinian territories. The agreement formed the basis for the 1979 Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty, under which Egypt diplomatically recognized Israel in return for the return of the Sinai. This historic agreement, however, isolated Egypt among the other Arab states that rejected peace with Israel. Sadat was therefore later assassinated by Islamists, but his successor Husni Mubarak did not reverse the normalization of relations with Israel.

1980–2001
In 1982, Israel intervened in the Lebanese Civil War, with Israeli forces advancing as far as Beirut to fight the PLO, which was active in Lebanon and which subsequently moved its headquarters to Tunisia. After the assassination of Lebanese Maronite President Bachir Gemayel, Maronite militias murdered 900 Palestinians in the Sabra and Shatila massacre, with Israeli support. The Israelis withdrew to southern Lebanon two years later after the 1983 attack on the U.S. base in Beirut and U.S. President Ronald Reagan's withdrawal of American troops from Lebanon. Further peace negotiations were held in the 1980s, but initially without a breakthrough. The First Intifada, a Palestinian uprising that would last several years, began in December 1987, with the radical Hamas establishing itself as a second force alongside the PLO in the Palestinian territories. In 1988, the PLO proclaimed the Palestinian Declaration of Independence and proclaimed the State of Palestine, which was immediately recognized by the Arab states. With the beginning of the 1990s, the Arab states lost their main arms supplier with the collapse of the Soviet Union, and intra-Arab divisions opened up with the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990. PLO leader Yasser Arafat supported the Iraqis, which led to the expulsion of 400,000 Palestinians from Kuwait after the country's liberation. After prolonged efforts, a breakthrough in negotiations finally occurred in 1993 with the start of the Oslo peace process. This created the Palestinian Authority as the de facto government of the Palestinian territories, while the PLO recognized Israel's right to exist. It also facilitated the Israel-Jordan Peace Treaty, making Jordan the second Arab state to diplomatically recognize Israel in 1994. However, after the assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin by a Jewish extremist in 1995, the peace process stalled. Further efforts were made in the following years. In 2000, efforts to normalize Israeli relations with Syria failed because of Ehud Barak's refusal to fully withdraw from the Golan Heights. That same year, the implementation of a two-state solution also failed. An Israeli offer was to give the Palestinians the Gaza Strip and 91% of the West Bank, while ceding a small portion of Israeli territory to a future Palestinian state. Arafat, however, rejected the offer in the 2000 Camp David Summit.

2001–present
With the start of the Second Intifada and the departure of the committed peace broker Bill Clinton from office as U.S. president, the peace process collapsed. Israel increased settlement construction in the West Bank, but withdrew from Gaza in 2005. After Hamas came to power in Gaza, Israel began to tighten the Gaza blockade, with Egypt's assistance from 2008 onward. A rapprochement between Israel and Sunni Arab states took place in the 2010s due to their shared fear of Shiite Iran and its nuclear program. Unofficial cooperation occurred with Saudi Arabia in particular, with intelligence services from both countries assisting each other and officials regularly sharing intelligence. In June 2017, former Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Jaalon stated, "We and the Arabs, the same Arabs who organized in a coalition in the Six-Day War to try to destroy the Jewish state, are in the same boat with us today....The Sunni Arab countries, apart from Qatar, are largely in the same boat with us, because we all see a nuclear Iran as the greatest threat to us all." The term Arab-Israeli conflict would be irrelevant now. On August 16, 2019, Israel's foreign minister Israel Katz made a public declaration about military cooperation with the UAE amidst rising tensions with Iran. Also, on the same day, the UAE for the first time established telephone links to Israel by unblocking direct dialling to Israel's +972 country code.

2020 normalization with Arab states
The Israel–United Arab Emirates normalization agreement officially the Abraham Accords Peace Agreement: Treaty of Peace, Diplomatic Relations and Full Normalization Between the United Arab Emirates and the State of Israel, was initially agreed to in a joint statement by the United States, Israel and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on August 13, 2020, officially referred to as the Abraham Accords. The UAE thus became the third Arab country, after Egypt in 1979 and Jordan in 1994, to agree to formally normalize its relationship with Israel,  as well as the first Persian Gulf country to do so. Concurrently, Israel agreed to suspend plans for annexing parts of the West Bank. The agreement normalized what had long been informal but robust foreign relations between the two countries. The agreement was signed at the White House on September 15, 2020. At the same time, a treaty was signed between Israel and Bahrain, whereby Bahrain also recognized Israel. Soon after, Sudan and Morocco normalized relations with Israel.

2023
President Joe Biden said that Hamas’ attacks on Israel were intended in part to scuttle the potential normalization of the U.S. ally’s relations with Saudi Arabia. He mentioned that Hamas attacks aimed to halt Israel-Saudi Arabia agreement.

Bilateral relations with Arab states
Status of relations with Arab league member states.