Netanyahu says Israel has secret talks with Arab, Muslim leaders
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U.S. National Security Advisor Robert O'Brien (L), Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (C) and Senior U.S. Presidential Advisor Jared Kushner make joint statements about the Israeli-United Arab Emirates peace accords in Jerusalem, August 30, 2020. /Reuters

U.S. National Security Advisor Robert O'Brien (L), Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (C) and Senior U.S. Presidential Advisor Jared Kushner make joint statements about the Israeli-United Arab Emirates peace accords in Jerusalem, August 30, 2020. /Reuters

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that Israel has held secret talks with several Arab countries to normalize their relations, a day before Israel's first commercial flight to the United Arab Emirates (UAE). 
  
"There are many more unpublicized meetings with Arab and Muslim leaders," Netanyahu said during joint remarks in Jerusalem alongside U.S. President Donald Trump's senior advisor Jared Kushner and National Security Advisor Robert O'Brien. 
  
Netanyahu said these Arab leaders "recognize that their true interests are to normalize relations with Israel." 

"Today's breakthrough will become tomorrow's norms," he said. "It will pave the way for other countries to normalize their ties with Israel."

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Palestinians during a protest against the United Arab Emirates' deal with Israel, in Rafah city at the southern Gaza Strip, August 20, 2020. /Getty Images

Palestinians during a protest against the United Arab Emirates' deal with Israel, in Rafah city at the southern Gaza Strip, August 20, 2020. /Getty Images

Kushner referred to the so-called Abraham Accord, a U.S.-brokered peace agreement between Israel and the UAE to normalize their ties, as a "historic breakthrough," saying "the stage is set" for other Arab states to follow the UAE. 
  
The August 13 announcement has paved the way to "previously unthinkable" economic, security and religious cooperation between Israel and the UAE, Kushner added. 
  
Kushner and O'Brien will join on Monday an official Israeli delegation that will fly to Abu Dhabi, capital of the UAE. The flight, by Israel's national airliner El Al, marks the first commercial flight between the two states. 
  
The Israeli delegation will be headed by the chief of the National Security Council Meir Ben Shabbat. 
  
According to the Israeli prime minister's office, the talks will focus on "ways to promote cooperation in a variety of fields such as aviation and tourism, trade, economy and finance, health, energy, security and more." 

The UAE repealed a 1972 law boycotting Israel on Saturday. 

"It will be permissible to enter, exchange or possess Israeli goods and products of all kinds in the UAE and trade in them," read a federal decree issued by UAE President Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al-Nahyan. 

(With input from Xinhua, AFP)