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Donald Trump, Pakistan, and the Abraham Accords

Wednesday, May 27, 2026
5 min read
Donald Trump, Pakistan, and the Abraham Accords

Donald Trump left Pakistan in a real bind. He was pushing Islamabad to join the Abraham Accords , demanding they formally recognize Israel. He argued that a bigger diplomatic group needed to form, something that would be essential for any future peace deal involving Iran.

This came at a really awkward time. Washington and Tehran are still completely stuck, you know? They remain at loggerheads over big stuff—Iran’s uranium program, its nuclear activities—all while a ceasefire is just hanging there, fragile as it is.

Trump talked about the Accords. He claimed they were a massive financial, economic, social boom for the countries involved—the UAE, Bahrain, Morocco, Sudan, Kazakhstan. He said the members never even suggested pausing, let alone leaving.

He framed it, kind of dramatically. He called the Accords “great” for the Arab nations, and he suggested it would be “even better” for everyone else who joined.

Trump suggested the U.S. had put together a “very complex puzzle.” He pushed key Muslim-majority countries to normalize relations with Israel, which is a key ally for Washington.

Pakistan, though. It hasn't recognized Israel in seventy-eight years. So, Islamabad was faced with a tough choice. One: bow to Trump. Or two: stick to their long-standing position.

Pakistan chose the second path. Their Defence Minister, Khawaja Asif, made it clear that compromising their “fundamental ideologies” was just not acceptable.

“I don’t think we should join any such accord that clashes with our fundamental ideologies,” Asif said in an interview with Samaa TV. “How will you sit down with those people whose word cannot be trusted even for a single day?”

The Abraham Accords themselves were signed back in 2020. They are basically aGreements brokered by the U.S. between Israel and several Arab states.

It sets up a framework for peace, trying to link followers of Judaism, Islam, and Christianity, aiming to normalize ties between Jerusalem and those Arab countries.

But there’s a huge, practical hurdle for Pakistan if they even considered it. Think about the passport.

Islamabad’s passport has a specific restriction. It bans its citizens from traveling to Israel. It says right there: “This passport is valid for all countries of the world except Israel.”

If Pakistan were to join this deal, they’d have to get rid of that “except Israel” line from future passport designs. That’s a massive headache. Normalizing relations isn't just about symbols, it means changing things on the ground—visa systems, immigration rules. It’s a lot more work than just signing a paper.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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