World

Lindsey Graham and Pakistan's Stance on the Abraham Accords

Friday, May 29, 2026
5 min read
Lindsey Graham and Pakistan's Stance on the Abraham Accords

Lindsey Graham has been raising some serious questions about Pakistan’s role lately. He’s talking about Islamabad’s position as a mediator in the whole US-Iran mess. Graham called the country’s stance “more than problematic.” He pushed Pakistan to actually clarify where they stand on joining the Abraham Accords .

It came out in a post on X. Graham zeroed in on Pakistan’s neutrality, bringing up the country’s history. He pointed to the long-standing hostility toward Israel.

He wrote something like, “It has been apparent to me for quite a while that Pakistan as a mediator is more than problematic. Their animosity towards Israel is long-standing.”

Then things got sharper. Graham brought up some more intense stuff. He alleged that Iranian military aircraft are being housed on Pakistani air bases. He also mentioned past rhetoric from the highest Pakistani officials against Israel, calling it “disturbing.”

This all happened after Pakistan Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif made a public rejection. Asif said Islamabad would never join the Abraham Accords because they just don’t trust Israel.

Graham followed up on that. He looked back at Asif’s earlier comments. He said, “As to the defense minister’s comments about the Abraham Accords , saying that Pakistan would never join because they don’t trust Israel: The clip may be a year old, but I fear the sentiment is fresh.”

He pushed for an answer. He insisted that Pakistan needed to give a response now to President Trump’s call to join those Accords.

This was all happening against the backdrop of Pakistan being involved in those mediation efforts linking the US and Iran ceasefire talks.

The controversy really kicked up when Asif reiterated the refusal to recognize Israel. He made it clear he was personally opposed to Islamabad joining any arrangement that clashed with the country’s fundamental ideology.

Asif said, “Personally, I don’t think we should join any such accord which clashes with our fundamental ideologies.”

He also brought up other points. He questioned Israel’s credibility itself. He asked, “How will you sit down with those people whose word cannot be trusted even for a single day?”

The minister kept going. He reiterated Pakistan’s established policy. He said, “We have a very clear stance that this is not acceptable to us.”

He even touched on passport policy. He pointed out that Israeli territory isn’t recognized on Pakistani travel documents.

And then there was the core demand. Pakistan believes Israel should only be accepted after a Palestinian state is established, based on the pre-1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as the capital.

This all happened while Trump was pushing harder. He urged multiple Muslim-majority countries—Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Pakistan, Turkiye, Egypt, and Jordan—to eventually join the aGreement.

The Abraham Accords themselves started back in 2020. They set up diplomatic, economic, and security ties between Israel and several Arab nations, all under US mediation. It’s a complicated picture.

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.

#sensational#world#global#trending

More from World

View All

Latest Headlines