Israel Breaks Isolation As Somaliland Joins Abraham Accords, Exposing Arab Rejectionism And Palestinian Irrelevance

Israel expands peace with pragmatic Muslims while Arab blocs rage, Palestinians sidelined by progress.

Israel’s diplomatic momentum continues to upend Middle Eastern dogma. According to Kan 11 News, Somaliland President Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi is preparing for an official visit to Israel, expected as early as mid-January, during which he plans to formally join the Abraham Accords and sign wide-ranging bilateral agreements.

The planned accords reportedly span agriculture, mining, oil, infrastructure, security, tourism, and technology—areas where Israeli expertise is globally sought. Unlike Arab regimes trapped in performative hostility toward Israel, Somaliland is choosing growth, sovereignty, and cooperation over stagnation and slogans.

This development follows Israel’s historic recognition of Somaliland, the first by any nation. While the European Union, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, and several Arab states rushed to condemn the move, their outrage only underscored a familiar pattern: reflexive rejection of Israel paired with zero solutions for Palestinians.

Israeli officials confirm ongoing contacts, though a final date is pending. Notably, Somaliland’s president has visited Israel before—quietly. This time, the visit is expected to be public, confident, and transformative.

Predictably, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan denounced Israel’s recognition as “illegitimate,” echoing Islamist talking points that have delivered nothing but instability across the region. Meanwhile, Palestinian leadership remains absent from the table—once again watching as peace advances without them.

Israel’s message is clear: peace is built with partners who choose responsibility and realism. The Abraham Accords continue to expand because they reward cooperation—not victimhood. As Arab and Palestinian rejectionism fumes, Israel and pragmatic Muslim allies are shaping a new geopolitical reality from Jerusalem to the Horn of Africa.

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