President Donald J. Trump announces Bahrain is joining United Arab Emirates in normalizing ties with Israel in a new Bahrain-Israel Peace Deal.
Remarks by President Trump on the Announcement of Normalization of Relations Between Israel and the Kingdom of Bahrain
Oval Office
1:02 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. Just a few moments ago, I hosted a historic call between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel and King Hamad Al Khalifa of Bahrain. Both leaders expressed their condolences as well to the American people on this very, very tragic, horrible event that took place on September 11th. And they very much meant it. I want to thank them for that.
Thereโs no more powerful response to the hatred that spawned 9/11 than the agreement that weโre about to tell you. You will hear something today thatโs, I think, very, very important for not only the Middle East but for the world.
In the spirit of peace and cooperation, both leaders also agreed that Bahrain will fully normalize its diplomatic relations with Israel. They will exchange embassies and ambassadors, begin direct flights between their countries, and launch cooperation initiatives across a broad range of sectors, including health, business, technology, education, security, and agriculture. This is a truly historic day.
There have been two peace agreements with Israel in the last 72 years. This is now the second peace agreement that we have announced in the last month, and I am very hopeful that there will be more to follow. I can tell you thereโs tremendous enthusiasm on behalf of other countries to also join. And we think, ultimately, youโll have most countries join, and youโre going to have the Palestinians in a very good position. They want to come in โ theyโre going to want to come in because all of their friends are in. But we have tremendous enthusiasm for coming into the deal.
I want to thank the group of very talented people behind me, and youโre going to be hearing from them in a second. But itโs just a very historic day, a very important day, and so interesting that itโs on 9/11. Itโs such a great time. We didnโt know this was going to happen in terms of the timing, but it did happen, and weโre very honored by it.
When I took office, the Middle East was in a state of absolute chaos. Iโve restored trust with our regional partners, and together weโve eliminated the ISIS caliphate 100 percent; isolated the radicals who pervert Islam and sow instability. Today, nations across the region and throughout the world are joining together, united in their determination to build a better future, free from the evils which perpetuate terror. And I think you see that. I think you see that happening very, very strongly.
I also spoke with King Salman of Saudi Arabia, and we talked about this, and he is โ heโs a great gentleman. And what theyโve done in terms of fighting terror is a much different ballgame than it was before we attained this office. The fact is that Saudi Arabia was doing things that theyโre not doing anymore, and so are other countries and neighbors. They are doing things that they just would never have done. Their levels and their โ all of the things โ all of the many, many elements of fighting and hate, they seem to be evaporating. And weโll find out very soon. But they seem to be evaporating.
So things are happening in the Middle East that nobody thought was even possible to think about, and thatโs whatโs going on right now. Bahrain has agreed to join Israel and the United Arab Emirates for โ and, by the way, I want to thank Mohammed, whoโs a great leader, a truly great leader โ at the White House on Tuesday. So theyโll be here on Tuesday for the signing of the Abraham Accords. The significance of the signing will be elevated from an already historic breakthrough to one representing a previously unthinkable regional transformation. And thatโs exactly what it is. Itโs unthinkable that this could happen, and so fast.
And, as you know, when we did the original signing with โ and which will actually take place in terms of official on Tuesday โ United Arab Emirates, people thought that was amazing. And now theyโre hearing this, and theyโre also hearing from other countries because they understand that other countries want to very much come in.
On this occasion, I want to thank the leaders of Israel and Bahrain for their vision and courage to forge this historic agreement. Their leadership is proving that the future can be filled with hope and does not need to be predetermined by conflicts of the past. You know all about the conflicts of the past; theyโre very legendary. There was a lot of problems going on, but weโve been able to work things out to a level that nobody thought possible. This is really something very special โ very, very special.
As more countries normalize relations with Israel โ which will happen quite quickly, we believe โ the region will become more and more stable, secure, and prosperous.
In the meantime, weโre pulling most of our soldiers out. So weโre doing it the opposite way. They were doing it with nothing but fighting and blood all over the place. The sand was loaded up with blood. And now youโre going to see that a lot of that sand is going to be loaded up with peace.
The United States will continue to stand with the people of the region and work with them, and build a brighter and much more hopeful future.
So weโre very proud of this. And as time goes by, I think youโll see more and more why. I think most of you realize how important it is. Even the New York Times, who was very generous in their praise of the original deal, and they never thought โ I think nobody thought this was going to happen so quickly after the first.
But theyโll both be here on Tuesday. Theyโre going to be signing. Benjamin Netanyahu will be here. The Prime Minister will be here โ Israel. And we look forward to that.
Just on this deal, because of the importance of the deal, weโll take some questions. But first, Iโd like to ask Jared to say a few words and Mike Pence to say a few words and some of the folks. David, Iโd like you to say something about it because itโs so historic.
And these people have worked so hard and so long on it. This is really the culmination of a long period of time โ letโs put it that way. I donโt want to say how long, but itโs been โ itโs a long period of time. Itโs a great thing.
Jared, please.
MR. KUSHNER: Thank you, Mr. President. And first, I want to thank you for your leadership on this issue. Your first foreign trip was to Saudi Arabia, where you outlined a vision for the region. And all of the promises you made on that trip and all of the things that you foreshadowed have occurred.
Itโs been a strategy that youโve stuck with, and I want to thank you for giving me the trust and confidence that youโve given me in order to work on this file over the last years. And I think the results that weโve achieved has been beyond anyoneโs expectations. And I believe that thereโs even more to come.
I just returned from the region last week. I was in the Middle East, where I took the first commercial flight thatโs ever flown from Israel to the United Arab Emirates. That flight flew over Saudi Arabian airspace. It was the first time in 72 years that Saudi Arabia has now waived their airspace to allow commercial flights to fly from Israel back and forth.
Bahrain then did the same thing. The United Arab Emirates waived a 48-year boycott on Israel, which was an incredible development. And there are now delegations moving throughout the Middle East, figuring out how to bring the people closer together.
What President Trump has done here is unthinkable. Heโs brought people in the Middle East together. Thereโs been these barriers that have existed that have led to so much instability, so much war, so much loss, so much hopelessness. And weโre seeing so much hopefulness now coming.
And I will say something that I never thought would be the case, which is that, on this last trip, the amount of optimism that has happened, that weโre experiencing in the Middle East, is truly incredible.
So I just want to congratulate you. I want to congratulate the people of Israel. I want to congratulate the people from the Kingdom of Bahrain. I want to thank their tremendous leadership. And I also want to congratulate the people of the Middle East because the first deal that you were able to accomplish was so popular that things are really starting to move in a really strong direction.
And this makes America safer. It allows us to โ to bring our troops home. It allows us to work on bringing prosperity to American communities.
So, really, thank you for your leadership.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, Jared. Great job.
MR. KUSHNER: And congratulations on this great success.
THE PRESIDENT: Great job. Thank you very much, Jared.
Mike, please.
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Mr. President, I can think of no more fitting tribute to the heroes that were forged on this day 19 years ago, and all the heroes that were forged on battlefields ever since, than to see this peace agreement announced today.
And, Mr. President, you said from early on that we could stand with Israel and we could stand for peace. Your very first foreign trip was to the Arab world โ to reach out, to create new alliances. You affirmed our support for Israel when you moved the American embassy to Jerusalem. And the strength with which you have approached this has made now this second historic peace agreement possible.
And I just want to โ I want to congratulate you and thank you, Mr. President, for your leadership.
I also want to โ I want to thank the people of the Kingdom of Bahrain and the people of Israel for finding a way forward to begin to take one more step toward peace in the Middle East and to know that, in this President and in the American people, they will have an ally with us.
The Good Book says, โBlessed are the peacemakers.โ And, Mr. President, I just want to congratulate you, I want to congratulate Prime Minister Netanyahu and King Hamad of Bahrain on bringing peace between their nations and widening the reach of peace in the world.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Congratulations.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much, Mike. Great.
Our wonderful Ambassador to Israel, David Friedman, who has been really something. Heโs been โ I put him there. I knew him for a long time. He was one of the most successful lawyers in the country, by far. And at least, based on his paycheck, I can tell you that. (Laughter.) And he is a great lawyer. Heโs a great talent and a great dealmaker. And I put him there for a reason. I put him there to get it done, as in, just donโt be a regular ambassador, like so many are. Just get it done; see if you can bring peace to the Middle East.
David, please.
AMBASSADOR FRIEDMAN: Thank you, Mr. President. And I will always be indebted to you for giving me that honor. Itโs one that I hold extremely dear.
But, as you know, Mr. President, people have thought about the Middle East, for the past 100 years or more, as a place of violence, of hopelessness, of suffering, of war. What weโre seeing in real time, in this room today and last month, weโre seeing the paradigm for the Middle East completely change. The world is turning in a very positive way. And itโs all because, if I may say, because of the policy that you began in May of 2017 of trusting our allies, of empowering our allies; and in my case, of course, of being the greatest friend that Israel has ever had โ of putting people on the job who share those values and convictions. And the fruit is now being borne in this incredible peace agreement.
Your policy of โpeace through strengthโ has changed the world profoundly for the better. And Iโm โ as the Ambassador to Israel, Iโm eternally grateful for the changes that you have made for the U.S.-Israel relationship.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, David. Great job. Thank you.
Avi, please.
MR. BERKOWITZ: Thank you, Mr. President. Congratulations.
THE PRESIDENT: He looks young, but heโs not as young. (Laughter.) I will tell you, heโs very smart. Go ahead.
MR. BERKOWITZ: Thank you, Mr. President. Congratulations on just a tremendous, historic, you know, achievement here today. I think I just speak for everybody in this room, all of my colleagues who have worked in your administration, that thanks to your leadership, thereโs just a tremendous sense of pride to be an American, to work on these issues under your leadership.
And Iโm just so appreciative to you and so honored to be part of your team. So thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, Avi. (Applause.)
MR. HOOK: Mr. President, I think historians will look back on these two peace agreements as the beginning of the end of the Arab-Israeli conflict. And you talked about the journey to get here. And I remember I heard you pledge, when you were in Riyadh and when you were in Israel โ you pledged that you would strengthen Americaโs friendships and to build new partnerships in the pursuit of peace. And youโve kept that promise, and we see that very clearly today.
Rather than appeasing Americaโs adversaries in the region, youโve recruited Americaโs allies. And you focused on shared interests and shared threats, but you also asked them to shoulder their part of the burden and to fulfill their end of the obligation. Nations rallied behind it, and as a consequence, the foundation has now been laid for great things in the coming years.
THE PRESIDENT: Great. Well said. Thank you very much.
Would you have anything to say?
MAJOR GENERAL CORREA: Mr. President, on behalf of soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines, thank you for your bold leadership and Sheikh Mohammedโs bold leadership; Prime Minister Netanyahuโs bold leadership; King Hamadโs bold leadership; Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, again; your bold leadership. What weโve tried for the last 100 years has not worked.
And I think itโs very fitting that, on September 11th, we honor those special operators that we buried and lost with โ with peace. And this is a way to beat terrorism at the end of the day. So weโre honored and privileged. And thank you for your leadership.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, they had a lot of bad thinking, a lot of bad concepts, a lot of things that I never thought were going to work. These were the ones that we were relying on to make the deals, and they wasted 35 years; they wasted many, many years. And theyโre the ones that have been critical of us, and look whatโs happening: Now theyโre, all of a sudden, saying, โI think they made a mistake.โ Theyโre all saying that about themselves.
So I just want to thank this group in particular for staying here and helping us out and doing things that nobody thought couldโve happened. And under the old concepts of national defense or whatever category you want to put it under, it โ that wasnโt working, and it was never going to work. And we changed things around very drastically, and then we started to negotiate.
And the good news โ and I look at David because you know it, you see it, you hear it โ the good news is we have many other countries now in the Middle East that want to be in this. And that means peace โ because theyโre tired of fighting. You know, they can fight and theyโre all great fighters, and theyโre warriors, but even great warriors get tired of fighting, and theyโre tired of fighting.
And I can see things positively happening with Iran, ultimately. And I think that can all work out very well, and I think that so many great things are going to happen. And then we can also discuss the Palestinians. I think the Palestinians are going to end up doing something thatโs going to be very smart for them. And all their friends are coming into this, and they want to come into it โ they want to come into it very badly.
And I can see a lot of good things happening with respect to the Palestinians, which would be really wonderful. Whether you are on their side or not on their side, people want to see it all brought to an end, and brought to an end quickly. So thatโs going to be very important.
But this is a very historic day. Would anybody else like to say anything? Please, go. Please.
MR. VANDROFF: Mr. President, I just want to thank you and Ambassador OโBrien for giving me the opportunity to serve on the National Security Council staff and be part of something historic and be part of a team. Avi and Jared are tremendous leaders, and the opportunity to work with them to do something important has been the highlight of my life. And thank you for letting me do that, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: And youโve been doing this for a long time. You never saw anything like this, right? (Laughter.)
MR. VANDROFF: No. No, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: A little โ we take a little bit of a different approach.
MR. VANDROFF: Yes, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: Anybody? Please. Come up, my friend.
MR. POTTINGER: Mr. President, 19 years ago today, my father and I almost got caught in the crosshairs of that first jet that hit the Twin Towers. That event changed the course of my life; it led me to become a United States Marine, which led to other things that brought me through a strange path here. And I want thank you for the leadership youโve shown.
Walter Russell Mead recently wrote โ he was quoting Churchill, who once said โ he got a bowl of pudding, and he said, โTake it away. It has no theme.โ Thereโs now a theme emerging in the Middle East.
THE PRESIDENT: There is a theme. Thatโs good.
MR. POTTINGER: And it is a theme of what is possible from peace through strength, from not appeasing our enemies, and holding our allies and friends close.
So, congratulations, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. And this is a very, very big day. Very, very big day. Would you like to say something?
MR. GREENWAY: Yes, sir. Like Matt and many others, 19 years ago, within a month of the attacks of 9/11, I and others were conducting operations in Afghanistan. As General Correa pointed out, itโs a privilege to be in different historic circumstances today; to be part of a tremendous team with outstanding leadership, all of it possible, sir, because of your vision, because of your leadership and the relationships of everyone in this room. Itโs an enormous opportunity. Itโs something that no one could imagine, but itโs an enormous privilege, and Iโll always be grateful for it.
So, congratulations to you, sir. And thank you to you and everyone else here.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, itโs an honor to have worked with all of you. Youโre really talented people โ incredible. And you were willing to be flexible. The word โflexibleโ is a very important word because we werenโt going by the old standards and norms; we were going by standards that can get things done. But not only get them done, get them done in a much better way.
MR. GREENWAY: Yes, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: And this is just the beginning. A lot of things are happening, and theyโre happening very quickly. People want to be involved, and they want to be involved. For the first time, I think โ some of you have told me, the first time ever, that youโve ever seen anything like this, where theyโre rushing into an agreement. They want to be involved.
Theyโre tired of fighting, as I said. Theyโre tired of fighting. No matter how they are, no matter how great a warrior they are โ and you have some great warriors. I know most of them. But itโs time.
Thank you all very much. Thank you. (Applause.)END 1:22 P.M. EDT