Kazakhstan has officially joined the Abraham Accords, giving the US-brokered initiative new momentum five years after it first brought Israel closer to its Arab and Muslim neighbors. The announcement was made by US President Donald Trump on Thursday, marking the first nation to join the accords under his second administration.
Although Kazakhstan has maintained diplomatic and economic relations with Israel for more than three decades, its formal inclusion in the accords adds both symbolic and strategic importance. The decision carries particular weight amid evolving geopolitical dynamics in Central and West Asia.
The Abraham Accords are a series of US-brokered agreements that established official diplomatic ties between Israel and several Arab nations. The United Arab Emirates and Bahrain were the first to sign in 2020 during Trump’s first term, followed by Morocco and Sudan.
“The agreements were named after Abraham, a revered figure in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, reflecting a shared heritage among the participating nations and a symbolic spirit of reconciliation.”
The accords broke a long-standing regional taboo by making the UAE and Bahrain the first Arab countries in a quarter century to recognize Israel. The initiative was facilitated by Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, and remains one of the defining foreign policy achievements of his first presidency.
The inclusion of Kazakhstan renews the Abraham Accords’ impact, expanding their reach and underscoring President Trump’s continued influence on regional diplomacy and Middle East peace efforts.