Israeli Foreign Policy
The Israeli government is prepared to assist in relief efforts if and when Rabat requests it • Jerusalem’s Chords Bridge was lit up in the colors of the Moroccan flag.
The proposed cargo corridor would reduce Beijing’s and Moscow’s influence in the Mideast.
Trident DMG will provide Blue and White Future with “strategic communications services.”
The move comes a week after more than 170 people were injured when a demonstration by Eritreans turned violent in Tel Aviv.
More than 2,000 people were killed by the quake, the strongest to hit the area in 120 years • All 479 Israelis that were in the country have been accounted for, according to Israel’s Foreign Ministry.
The facility will aid local farmers to grow healthier crops in greater abundance.
Riyadh is the “preeminent target of the expansion of the Abraham Accords,” says chargé d’affaires in Jerusalem Stephanie Hallett.
The accords caused enormous damage to Israel’s national security, in a completely predictable way, said JCPA President Dan Diker.
The roots of the violent confrontation in Tel Aviv that left 170 people wounded go back to the 2005 crackdown on African migrants in Cairo.
Rabat and Jerusalem will work to reschedule Enaam Mayara’s historic visit, which was delayed due to ill health.
The president of Morocco’s House of Councillors, Enaam Mayara, was hospitalized in Jordan a day before his planned visit to Israel.
“We discussed several options for cooperation in the field of natural gas. Our two countries were lucky and we discovered gas reserves,” Netanyahu said after his meeting with Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides.