Bahrain's King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa met President Isaac Herzog on Sunday in the first visit by an Israeli head of state to the Gulf state since the countries forged ties two years ago and as a right-wing coalition government takes shape in Israel.
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Herzog, whose post is largely ceremonial, will then visit the United Arab Emirates, which also normalized ties with Israel in US-brokered pacts known as the Abraham Accords and had already hosted the Israeli president.
"I have come here with a distinguished delegation of people who lead the business sector in Israel, who are eager to connect and do business with the people of Bahrain," Herzog said according to a statement provided by his office.
Video: Bahrain's King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa meets Israeli President Isaac Herzog in Manama / Reuters /
Herzog described the meeting as a natural continuation of the 2020 breakthrough in relations between Israel and four states in the Arab world. "Another historic step in the relationship between Israel and Arab states that signed the Abraham Accords, with the hope that more and more countries will be able to join the circle of peace with the State of Israel," Herzog said, in English.
King Hamad also voiced hope the visit would strengthen bilateral relations, state news agency BNA reported while stressing Manama's support for "a just, comprehensive and sustainable peace that guarantees legitimate rights of the Palestinian people".
The incoming Israeli government under Benjamin Netanyahu after an election last month looks likely to include far-right politicians who oppose Palestinian statehood and want the Palestinian Authority, which wields limited self-rule in the West Bank, dismantled.
It includes Otzma Yehudit leader Itamar Ben-Gvir who was among Israeli officials including Netanyahu attending UAE national day celebrations at the Emirati embassy in Tel Aviv on Thursday.
Sunni Muslim-ruled UAE and Bahrain broke with decades of Arab policy when they forged ties, in the absence of Palestinian statehood, with Israel in 2020 under Netanyahu's leadership in deals partly driven by shared concerns over Shi'ite Iran's nuclear and missiles programs and growing regional sway.
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