Five More Nations Eyed as Trump Revives Abraham Accords Push
Donald Trump has renewed his signature Middle East initiative by calling on five additional countries to join the Abraham Accords. In a detailed post, the president listed Saudi Arabia, Qatar,...

Donald Trump has renewed his signature Middle East initiative by calling on five additional countries to join the Abraham Accords. In a detailed post, the president listed Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt and Jordan as prime candidates, noting that the UAE and Bahrain already participate. He framed the move as both an economic opportunity and a strategic counterweight to Iranian influence. Trump recounted recent conversations with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Emirati President Mohamed bin Zayed, Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad and other regional figures. He said each leader expressed openness to deeper cooperation with Israel provided the right diplomatic conditions are met. The president emphasized that current members have seen concrete gains in investment, technology transfer and tourism, benefits he expects will multiply with wider membership. The Abraham Accords broke with decades of Arab consensus by establishing formal diplomatic, commercial and cultural links between Israel and several Muslim-majority states. Despite the shadow of the Gaza war, none of the original signatories has retreated. Trump now wants to capitalize on that resilience by bringing in heavyweight players such as Pakistan and Turkey, whose participation he believes would lend the accords unmatched credibility. Critics caution that domestic politics in several candidate countries could complicate ratification. In Pakistan, strong public sympathy for the Palestinian cause and the absence of formal ties with Israel present formidable hurdles. Still, Trump insists the strategic and economic upside is too large to ignore and has set an ambitious timeline for new signatures.
