Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Sa’ar heads to Eastern Europe for embassy opening in Estonia

The Israeli foreign minister will be accompanied by a high-level economic and business delegation in a bid to tighten technological cooperation.

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar speaks at the Muni Expo 2025 conference in Tel Aviv on July 15, 2025. Photo by Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90.
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar speaks at the Muni Expo 2025 conference in Tel Aviv on July 15, 2025. Photo by Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90.

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar departed for Latvia on Monday, the first stop on a visit to Eastern Europe during which he is scheduled to inaugurate Israel’s new embassy in Tallinn, Estonia.

Sa’ar was scheduled to meet with his Latvian counterpart Baiba Braže in Riga later today.

The embassy in Tallinn will be Israel’s third to open this year at the decision of the foreign minister, after the opening of embassies in Moldova in February and in Zambia in August.

Estonia, a member of both the European Union and NATO, is a world leader in high-tech, and is considered a global pioneer in the digitalization of the public sector. It has maintained diplomatic ties with the Jewish state since 1992, and has had an embassy in Israel since 2009.

Sa’ar is expected to meet with Estonian Prime Minister Kristen Michal, Speaker of Parliament Lauri Hussar, Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna and Defense Minister Hanno Pevkur, according to Israel’s Foreign Ministry.

A high-level economic and business delegation will accompany Sa’ar on his trip, the ministry added.

The delegation will focus on the fields of technology, cyber and defense.

Representatives of Israeli companies will hold business meetings with dozens of Estonian firms that have already registered for the business forum and have shown great interest in Israeli technologies, according to the ministry.

The delegation is organized by the Foreign Ministry in cooperation with the Export Institute, the Israeli Defense Ministry and the Manufacturers’ Association of Israel.

In July, Sa’ar commended plans to open the embassy in Tallinn, saying, “This important move will contribute to our economic and defense partnership. It will help us deal with shared challenges.”

Russia’s brutal 2022 invasion of Ukraine has caused alarm in many European countries, including Scandinavia, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

Israeli President Isaac Herzog paid official visits to Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia in August.

His diplomatic meetings focused on “strengthening bilateral ties including in the fields of economic and security cooperation,” according to a statement from the president’s office at the time.

Rabbi Zushe Cunin, of the Chabad Jewish Community Center of Pacific Palisades, told JNS that there has been “tremendous anxiety” in the community over Bruce Lion’s behavior.
“At our own endorsement meeting, when asked to condemn Hamas and its Oct. 7th attacks, she point-blank refused, turning the question into yet another attack on Israel,” the Broadway Democrats wrote about their decision not to endorse Darializa Avila Chavelier, who is running for Congress in New York.
“Even if any Arab or Palestinian thinks that injustice has befallen them because of the existence of the state of Israel, moving on and forgetting about the injustice is much more in their interest than looking backwards,” Hussain Abdul-Hussain, author of The Arab Case for Israel, told JNS.
A month after his father was killed in a Queens park, Tzvi Yonie Itzkowitz told JNS that his family believes that the still-unsolved killing was motivated by Jew-hatred.
“The gravity of the situation and its widespread impact on our school community make this not the right time for a celebration,” the school stated in an email to parents.
The department said New York may be unlawfully discriminating against religious organizations by requiring long-term care facilities to accommodate residents based on gender identity without providing comparable faith-based exemptions.