Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu apologized to his Qatari counterpart for Israel’s attack in Doha during a White House telephone call on Monday, a source close to Netanyahu told Reuters.
The appeal to the Prime Minister Qatari Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman al-Thani came when Netanyahu met US President Donald Trump in Washington. A Qatari technical team is also in the White House, according to a separate source informed of talks.
The United Arab Emirates urges Israel to accept the Gaza Agreement
The United Arab Emirates is also pressing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to accept the Gaza peace proposal from US President Donald Trump and abandon any plan to annex the West Bank, a delegate told Reuters.
Find out more: Shehbaz supports Trump’s Gaza Peace Plan, calls for two -state solution to sustainable stability
The United Arab Emirates, the most eminent Arab country to normalize links with Israel under the Abraham agreements, warned Netanyahu that the annexation would close the door to Israeli normalization with the main Arab and Muslim nations, including Saudi Arabia and Indonesia, said the delegate.
“ Do not sabotage the agreement ” say the Israelis
The Israelis gathered outside the branch of the United States Embassy in Tel Aviv on Monday, calling President Donald Trump to press Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to accept his plan to end the Gaza War.
“Now, now,” sang the crowd, an AFP correspondent reported from the outside of the mission, while Trump and Netanyahu gathered in the White House.

“Let no sabotage attempt (the agreement),” said a demonstrator addressing the crowd.
The demonstrators held a banner who said: “President Trump, make history. Bring them home now. “
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Read also: Trump pushes Netanyahu to accept the Gaza Peace Plan at the White House meeting
In an open letter written to Trump on Sunday, the families of the Israeli hostages urged her to deliver his draft agreement to end the Gaza War.
“The stakes are too high and our families have waited too long that interference derails this progress,” wrote the hostage forum and disappeared families, the main organization representing parents of the hostages held in Gaza, in the letter to Trump.
Their call followed Trump’s remarks that a breakthrough in cease-fire negotiations was imminent, citing a 21-point plan that he gave to Arab and Muslim leaders on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly last week.
