What is the Abrahamic Accord, and how many Muslim countries have signed them so far?


 Efforts to end the US-Iran conflict are ongoing and the parties appear close to reaching an agreement. Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump has called on Muslim countries to accept and sign the Abraham Accords.

US President Trump, on Truth Social, called on all Islamic countries to sign the Abraham Accords.

Trump said that Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Pakistan, Turkey and other countries should sign the Abraham Accords, starting with Saudi Arabia and Qatar. One or two countries may be accepted if they have a reason not to join the Abraham Accords.

The US President said that it will prove to be a revolution in financial, economic and social development for the countries that sign the agreement. It will be a document that will be respected more than any other document signed in the world so far.

 

What is the Abraham Accords? How many Muslim countries have signed it so far? And what is Pakistan's position in this regard?

 

The idea of ​​a grand reconciliation between Muslims, Jews, and Christians emerged in 2020 from the United States. The basic idea was to reconcile the three major religions, especially the Muslim world, and Israel, which is known as the Abraham Accords.

The Abraham Accords came into effect in 2020 during the first term of US President Donald Trump. The Abraham Accords are a set of agreements reached to normalize relations between Israel and several Arab countries.

It aims to open embassies, establish economic, and security relations between Israel and Muslim countries, especially Arab countries, in each other’s countries in the Middle East.

The Abraham Accords began with the establishment of relations between the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain with Israel. After the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan also signed agreements to normalize relations with Israel.

Last year, US President Donald Trump announced that Kazakhstan had also officially joined the Abraham Accords.

Israel saw this as a major step towards its diplomatic acceptance in the Arab world, but for the Palestinian leadership and many Muslim countries, the fundamental question remained: what will happen to the Palestinian issue?

Pakistan’s official and constitutional position has consistently been that Israel cannot be recognized until the Palestinians are granted an independent and sovereign state based on the pre-1967 borders, with Jerusalem as their capital.

 

Pakistan’s position is not only diplomatic but also historical and constitutional. Since the time of Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, Pakistan’s state policy has been based on supporting the Palestinian right to self-determination.

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