Paraguay said on Wednesday it was moving its embassy in Israel back from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv, prompting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to order the closure of Jewish state's mission in the South American country in retaliation.
Palestinian authorities reacted by deciding to "immediately" open an embassy in Paraguay's capital Asuncion, Foreign Affairs Minister Riyad al-Maliki said, according to the official news agency Wafa.
Paraguay's new President Mario Abdo Benitez, who took office in mid-August, decided to move back the embassy "to contribute to the intensification of regional and international diplomatic efforts that aim to achieve a broad, just and durable peace in the Middle East," his government said.
"Israel views with utmost gravity the extraordinary decision by Paraguay, which will cloud bilateral relations," Netanyahu's office retorted on Twitter.
Paraguayan Foreign Minister Luis Alberto Castiglioni announces Paraguay is moving its embassy in Israel back from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv, September 5, 2018. /VCG Photo
The original decision to move the embassy from Tel Aviv was taken by Abdo Benitez's predecessor Horacio Cartes shortly after President Donald Trump had announced the United States would relocate its own embassy to Jerusalem. Cartes even joined Netanyahu in the new embassy's opening ceremony in Jerusalem in May.
Abdo Benitez was already president elect at that point and had questioned the decision, complaining that he had not been consulted.
Announcing the move, his government said it considered the return to Tel Aviv "appropriate," but Netanyahu's office replied that the decision had cast a shadow on relations between the two countries.
Paraguay, though, pointed to a long history of positive relations with Israel. "I don't think this should annoy our Israeli brothers and friends," said Paraguay's Foreign Minister Luis Castiglioni. "There are more than 85 countries that have kept their embassies in Tel Aviv and we're historic allies of Israel. Don't forget that Paraguay's vote was the decisive vote in the creation of Israel."
In line with most of Latin America, Paraguay was one of the 33 countries that voted in favor – compared to just 13 against and 10 abstentions – of the 1947 United Nations two-state partition plan for what was until then British Mandate Palestine.
Then Paraguayan President Horacio Cartes (L) shakes hands with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a meeting in Jerusalem, following the dedication ceremony of the embassy of Paraguay in Jerusalem, May 21, 2018. /VCG Photo
Paraguay's new President Mario Abdo Benitez gestures to the public as he rides in an open car alongside first lady Silvana Lopez Moreira after his inauguration ceremony in Asuncion, Paraguay, August 15, 2018. /VCG Photo
Castiglioni said Paraguay had always been "predictable in its international relations" but that Cartes's move was "a distortion of this tradition and culture of respect for international law" and UN decrees.
Trump broke with decades of US policy by moving the US embassy to Jerusalem on May 14, infuriating Palestinians and intensifying protests on the Gaza border, with 60 killed in clashes with Israeli forces that day.
His move was followed by Guatemala while the Czech Republic decided to reopen its honorary consulate in Jerusalem as President Milos Zeman voiced his wish to also move its embassy from Tel Aviv.
(Cover: A general view shows part of Jerusalem's Old City and the Dome of the Rock. /VCG Photo)