'More and more' countries want to join Abraham Accords, Trump says



US President Donald Trump on Monday said “more and more” countries want to join the Abraham Accords, the historic agreements that established relations between Israel and four Arab nations.

The 2020 accords were negotiated during Mr Trump's first term in office. His successor, Joe Biden, tried to expand the agreements to include Saudi Arabia but the effort was derailed by the outbreak of the Gaza war.

“You're going to see countries start to fill up the Abraham Accords, more and more countries want to join,” Mr Trump said during a cabinet meeting at the White House. “So countries are starting to want to get involved very much with the Abraham Accords again.”

Vice President JD Vance attacked the Biden administration for failing to add more countries to the Abraham Accords, claiming this was done out of “political spite”. He said more nations were now keen to sign on.

The UAE and Bahrain signed the accords with Israel at the White House in September 2020. They were followed by Morocco and Sudan.

They were the first Arab countries to sign a peace treaty with Israel since Jordan in 1994 and Egypt in 1979.

Updated: March 24, 2025, 8:24 PM