Oman established hidden relations with Israel in the 1970s.[1] It sought Israeli military assistance in fighting the Dhofar Marxist rebellion.[1]
In 1994, the countries established unofficial trade relations, which were discontinued in 2000. In 2018, Israeli Prime MinisterBenjamin Netanyahu led a delegation to Oman and met with Sultan Qaboos and other senior Omani officials.[2] In February 2019, Omani foreign minister, Yusuf bin Alawi, said that Oman will not normalize its relations with Israel until a sovereign Palestinian state has been established.[3] Moreover, Oman has criminalized ties with Israel [4]
In 2020, after Sultan Qaboos died, the Israeli PM commended Qaboos and gave his condolences.[5] In 2023, Oman announced it will allow Israeli aircraft to fly over its airspace, shortening flight times to Far East destinations,[6] although Israel's flag carrier El Al stopped flights from flying over Omani airspace after the Israel–Hamas war.[7]
History
Background
Unlike most other nations in the region, Oman has not participated in any of the armed conflicts fought between Arab states and Israel.
Hidden relations
Oman established hidden relations with Israel in the 1970s. Oman established those ties in order to receive military assistance from Israel in fighting the Dhofar Marxist rebellion, in particular the Dhofar Liberation Front. Due to the sensitivity of such ties at the time, they were hidden from the United Kingdom.[1]
Oman was one of two Arab nations (the other being Morocco) not to break off diplomatic relations with Egypt after the Camp David accords in 1979.[1]
In January 1996, Israel and Oman signed an agreement on the reciprocal opening of trade representative offices.[8]
During the Madrid talks during the 1990s, Oman pushed for Arab-Israeli peace.[1] Some diplomats and researchers have said that it is possible Oman was one of the first countries to push for such a peace.[1]
Oman was interested at the time in agricultural assistance, with Israel assisting Omani agriculture and the combat of water inefficiency through the provision of Israeli drip irrigation technology.[1] Oman had pushed at the time for a regional water project, specifically on desalination and was interested in Israeli technology.[1]
Frozen relations (2000–18)
Official relations were frozen with the outbreak of the Second Intifada in October 2000.[9] Still, in 2008, Oman's Foreign Affairs Minister Yusuf bin Alawi bin Abdullah met with Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni during their visit to Qatar.[8]
Visit by Israeli prime minister (2018)
In October 2018, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu met Sultan Qaboos bin Said al Said in Muscat; the visit was revealed following Netanyahu's return to Israel.[10] Right after the visit, Omani Foreign Minister Yusuf bin Alawi bin Abdullah described Israel as an "accepted Middle East state." He said, "The world is also aware of this fact. Maybe it is time for Israel to be treated the same [as other states] and also bear the same obligations."[11] In April 2019, bin Abdullah said that "Arabs must take initiatives to make Israel overcome 'fears for its future' in the region."[12]