International recognition of Israel

The State of Israel was formally established by the Israeli Declaration of Independence on 14 May 1948, and was admitted to the United Nations (UN) as a member state on 11 May 1949.[1][2] As of December 2020, it has received diplomatic recognition from 165 (85%) of the 193 total UN member states. 28[lower-alpha 1] member states have either never recognized Israel or have withdrawn their recognition; while others have severed diplomatic relations without explicitly withdrawing recognition. Alongside its status as a state with limited recognition since its independence,[3] Israel's sovereignty has been and continues to be disputed by some countries—predominantly those in the Muslim world—as a consequence of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and broader Arab–Israeli conflict.

  Israel
  Countries that recognize Israel
  Countries that have withdrawn recognition
  Countries that have suspended or cut relations with Israel
  Countries that have never recognized Israel

History

On 14 May 1948, the Israeli Declaration of Independence[4] formally established a Jewish state in part of the former British Mandate of Palestine, in accordance with the United Nations Partition Plan. The Arab League was opposed to any partition and to the establishment of Israel, and an Arab coalition jointly invaded the territory of the newly formed country one day after its independence, sparking the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.

Following Israel's establishment, the Israeli provisional government was established to govern the Yishuv; and while military operations were still in progress, it was promptly granted de facto recognition by the United States,[5][6] followed by Iran (which had voted against the Partition Plan), Guatemala, Iceland, Nicaragua, Romania, and Uruguay. The Soviet Union was the first country to grant de jure recognition to Israel on 17 May 1948,[7] followed by Nicaragua, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and Poland.[8] The United States extended de jure recognition after the first Israeli election,[9] on 31 January 1949.[10]

By the late 1960s, Israel had established diplomatic relations with almost all of the countries of Western Europe, North America, South America, and Sub-Saharan Africa combined.

To put additional diplomatic, economic, and military pressure on Israel in the wake of the 1967 Arab–Israeli War, oil-producing Arab countries imposed an oil embargo on countries that had bilateral relations with Israel. As a result, many African and Asian countries broke off their ties with Israel. The Soviet Union also shifted its support in favour of the Arab cause against Israel during this time, leading most countries of the Eastern Bloc to sever diplomatic ties in 1967; these included the Soviet Union itself, as well as Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and Bulgaria. Other countries in the Soviet sphere of influence, such as the People's Republic of China and Mongolia, also did not establish relations with Israel. Diplomatic relations with these countries were restored or established following the collapse of the Soviet Union, and new countries that had gained independence after the Soviet Union's dissolution also recognised Israel in their own right.

On 1 September 1967, the then-eight members of the Arab League issued the Khartoum Resolution, which included three pledges that forbade recognition, peace, and negotiations with Israel. However, Egypt, Jordan, and Mauritania gradually recognized Israel, though Mauritania broke off ties and withdraw recognition in 2010. As part of the 2020 Abraham Accords, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco all established normalized bilateral ties with Israel.[11][12] Pressure was again exerted by the Arab League after the 1973 Arab–Israeli War, which led Cuba, Mali, and the Maldives to break off ties with Israel. Niger severed bilateral ties with Israel during the Second Intifada, and Venezuela broke off ties after the 2008–2009 Gaza War.

Following Israel's recognition of and entering into negotiations with the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), many African, Asian, and Arab countries either restored or established diplomatic relations with Israel. The Vatican began a bilateral relationship with Israel in 1994. Some countries broke or suspended relations during the 2006 Lebanon War and after the blockade of the Gaza Strip. Although Guinea broke diplomatic ties with Israel in 1967, Israel's extensive support for Guinea during its fight against an Ebola virus epidemic led to the re-establishment of bilateral relations in 2016.[13] Nicaragua restored relations in March 2017; Chad did likewise in January 2019.[14] The most recent country to establish diplomatic relations with Israel was Bhutan, on 12 December 2020.[15]

United Nations membership

On 15 May 1948, one day after its independence, Israel applied for membership with the United Nations (UN), but the application was not acted on by the Security Council. Israel's second application was rejected by the Security Council on 17 December 1948 by a 5-to-1 vote, with 5 abstentions. Syria was the sole negative vote; the United States, Argentina, Colombia, the Soviet Union, and the Ukrainian SSR voted in favour; and Belgium, the United Kingdom, Canada, China, and France abstained.

Israel's application was renewed in 1949 after the first Israeli election. By Security Council Resolution 69 on 4 March 1949, the UN Security Council voted 9-to-1 in favour of Israeli membership, with Egypt voting against and the United Kingdom abstaining.[16] Those voting in favour were China, France, the United States, the Soviet Union, Argentina, Canada, Cuba, Norway, and the Ukrainian SSR.

On 11 May 1949, the UN General Assembly, by the requisite two-thirds majority of its then-58 members, approved the application to admit Israel to the UN by General Assembly Resolution 273.[17][18] The vote in the General Assembly was 37 to 12, with 9 abstentions. Those that voted in favour of Israel were: Argentina, Australia, Bolivia, the Byelorussian SSR, Canada, Chile, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Czechoslovakia, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, France, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Iceland, Liberia, Luxembourg, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, the Philippines, Poland, the Ukrainian SSR, South Africa, the Soviet Union, the United States, Uruguay, Venezuela, and Yugoslavia. Those that voted against were six of the then-seven members of the Arab League (Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Yemen) as well as Afghanistan, Burma, Ethiopia, India, Iran, and Pakistan. Those abstaining were: Belgium, Brazil, Denmark, El Salvador, Greece, Siam, Sweden, Turkey, and the United Kingdom.[19] Many of the countries that voted in favour or had abstained had already recognized Israel before the UN vote, at least on a de facto basis. Of these countries, Cuba and Venezuela have since withdrawn recognition.

Present situation

Legend:
  Israel
  Countries that reject passports from Israel
  Countries that reject passports from Israel and any other passport that contains Israeli stamps or visas

As of December 2020, 165 of the 193 total member states of the United Nations (UN) recognize Israel. 28 UN member states do not recognize Israel: 15 members of the Arab League (Algeria, Comoros, Djibouti, Iraq, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Syria, Tunisia, and Yemen); ten non-Arab members of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Brunei, Indonesia, Iran, Malaysia, Maldives, Mali, Niger, and Pakistan); and Cuba, North Korea, and Venezuela.[20] In 2002, the Arab League proposed the recognition of Israel by Arab countries as a pathway towards a resolution of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict under the Arab Peace Initiative. Following the Abraham Accords, which were signed in September 2020 between Israel and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, the Palestinian National Authority condemned any Arab agreement with Israel as dishonourable, describing them as a betrayal to the Palestinian cause and a blow to their quest for an independent Palestinian state.[21]

The passports of some countries are not valid for travel to Israel, including Bangladesh, Brunei, Iran, Iraq, and Pakistan. Thirteen countries do not accept Israeli passports: Algeria, Bangladesh, Brunei, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Malaysia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Yemen.[22] Some of these countries also do not accept passports of other countries whose holder has an Israeli visa or stamp on it. The stamp may be a visa stamp, or a stamp on entry or departure. Because of these issues, Israeli immigration controls do not stamp passports with an entry visa, instead stamping on a separate insert which is discarded on departure. However, a stamp of another country which indicates that the person has entered Israel may frustrate that effort. For example, if an Egyptian departure stamp is used in any passport at the Taba Border Crossing, that is an indication that the person entered Israel, and a similar situation arises for land crossings into Jordan. Some countries also ban direct flights and overflights to and from Israel.[23] In August 2020, the United Arab Emirates permitted direct flights from Israel, and Saudi Arabia and Bahrain authorized overflights for such flights.[24] On 8 October 2020, Israel and Jordan reached an agreement to allow flights to cross over both countries’ airspace.[25]

The Israeli flag and national anthem were banned from the 2017 International Judo Federation (IJF) at Abu Dhabi, with Israeli contestants having to display the IJF's flag and anthem instead.[26] The ban on Israeli symbols was lifted in 2018 and the Israeli flag and national anthem were allowed to be displayed.[27] Miri Regev, the Israeli Minister of Culture and Sports, was also allowed to attend the October 2018 event in Abu Dhabi.[27] In December 2017, seven Israelis were denied visas by Saudi Arabia to compete in an international chess tournament.[28]

List by country

Legend:

States that that have never formally recognized Israel and are in a state of war with Israel
States that have never formally recognized Israel
States that have withdrawn recognition from, cut, or suspended relations with Israel
States that recognize Israel

UN member states

StateDate of de facto recognitionDate of de jure recognitionNotes
 Afghanistan[29]Does not accept Israeli passports.
1 Albania16 April 1949[30]Diplomatic relations established on 20 August 1991.[31]
 Algeria[32][33]Does not accept Israeli passports.[22]
2 Andorra13 April 1994[34]
3 Angola16 April 1992[35]Date diplomatic relations established
4 Antigua and Barbuda22 June 1983[36]Date diplomatic relations established
5 Argentina14 February 1949[37]
6 Armenia4 April 1992[38]Date diplomatic relations established
7 Australia29 January 1949[39]
8 Austria15 March 1949[40]8 May 1956Date diplomatic relations established. Prior to that, the two countries had maintained consular relations since 1950. Delegations were upgraded to embassy status in 1959.[41]
9 Azerbaijan7 April 1992[42]Date diplomatic relations established.
10 Bahamas
11 Bahrain11 September 2020[43]15 September 2020[44]On 15 September 2020, an agreement was signed to normalize relations.[43]
 Bangladesh[45][46]Does not accept Israeli passports, and Bangladeshi passports are not valid for travel to Israel.[22]
12 Barbados29 August 1967[47]Date diplomatic relations established
13 Belarus11 May 1949[48]26 May 1992[49]Date diplomatic relations established
14 Belgium15 January 1950[50]
15 Belize6 September 1984[51]Date diplomatic relations established
16 Benin5 December 1961[52]Date diplomatic relations established. Relations severed in October 1973, and resumed in July 1992.[53][54]
17 Bhutan[20]12 December 2020[55]Date diplomatic relations established
18 Bolivia22 February 1949[56]24 February 1949[57]Relations severed in January 2009,[58] and restored in November 2019.[59]
19 Bosnia and Herzegovina26 September 1997[60]Date diplomatic relations established
20 BotswanaBroke off relations in November 1973, restored in December 1993.
21 Brazil7 February 1949[61]
 Brunei[20]Does not accept Israeli passports, and Brunei passports are not valid for travel to Israel[22]
22 Bulgaria4 December 1948Relations severed on 10 June 1967, and restored on 3 May 1990.[62]
23 Burkina Faso5 July 1961[52]Date diplomatic relations established. Relations severed in October 1973, and re-established in October 1993.[53][54][63]
24 BurundiRelations severed in May 1973,[54] and restored in March 1995.
25 Cambodia30 August 1960Date diplomatic relations established. Cambodia broke off relations in 1975; they were restored on 5 October 1993.[64][65]
26 Cameroon15 September 1960[66]Date diplomatic relations established. Relations severed in October 1973 and restored in August 1986.[54][67]
27 Canada11 May 1949[48][68]
28 Cape Verde17 July 1994[69]Date diplomatic relations established
29 Central African RepublicRelations were broken in October 1973,[54] were resumed in January 1991.
30 Chad10 January 1961Relations were established in 1961, but severed on 28 November 1972.[54][70] In 2005, reports emerged of a mutual intention to renew diplomatic relations.[71] Relations restored on 20 January 2019.[14]
31 Chile11 May 1949[72]
32 China24 January 1992The Republic of China granted de jure recognition to Israel on 1 March 1949.[56] The two states maintained diplomatic relations until Israel's recognition of the People's Republic of China on 8 January 1950. The PRC, however, did not formally reciprocate until the eventual establishment of diplomatic relations in 1992.[73]
33 Colombia1 February 1949[56]
 Comoros[20]
34 Costa Rica19 June 1948[74]
35 Croatia4 September 1997[75]Date diplomatic relations established
 Cuba14 January 194918 April 1949[76]Cuba severed relations in September 1973,[77] and the most recent government does not recognize it.[78]
36 Cyprus21 January 1961Date diplomatic relations established. They had been agreed to on 17 August 1960, but final establishment was postponed due to pressure from Arab nations.[79]
37 Czech Republic18 May 1948[80]Recognition extended under Czechoslovakia. Relations under Czechoslovakia were severed between June 1967 and February 1990. Diplomatic relations with the Czech Republic were established 1 January 1993.[81]
38 Democratic Republic of the Congo26 June 1960Date diplomatic relations established. Ties severed on 4 October 1973, and restored on 13 May 1982.[54][82]
39 Denmark2 February 1949[56]12 July 1950[83]
 Djibouti[20]
40 DominicaJanuary 1978[81]Date diplomatic relations established
41 Dominican Republic29 December 1948[84]
42 East Timor[85]29 August 2002
43 Ecuador2 February 1949[56]
44 Egypt19 November 1977[86]26 March 1979[87]Signatory to the Khartoum Resolution.[33] Later became the first Arab state to recognize Israel, with the Egypt–Israel peace treaty.
45 El Salvador11 September 1948[88]
46 Equatorial GuineaRelations severed in October 1973,[54] and resumed in January 1994.[89]
47 Eritrea6 May 1993[65][90]Date diplomatic relations established
48 Estonia9 January 1992[91]Date diplomatic relations established
49 EswatiniSeptember 1968[81]
50 Ethiopia24 October 1961[92]Prior to de jure recognition, Ethiopia maintained consular relations with Israel since 1956. Relations were broken in October 1973,[54] and resumed in November 1989.
51 Federated States of Micronesia[93]23 November 1988Date diplomatic relations established
52 FijiAugust 1970[81]Date diplomatic relations established
53 Finland[94]11 June 1948[95]18 March 1949
54 France24 January 1949[96]
55 Gabon[64]29 September 1993[97]Relations severed in October 1973,[54] and resumed in September 1993.
56 GambiaRelations broken in October 1973,[54] and resumed in September 1992
57 Georgia1 June 1992[98]Date diplomatic relations established
58 Germany10 September 1952 (West Germany before 3 October 1990)[99]12 May 1965[100]Date diplomatic relations established. Prior to this, Germany signed the Reparations agreement with Israel. East Germany never had diplomatic relations with Israel during its existence.
59 GhanaRelations broken in October 1973,[54] and resumed in August 1994
60 Greece[92]15 March 194921 May 1990[101]Date diplomatic relations established
61 GrenadaJanuary 1975[81]Date diplomatic relations established
62 Guatemala19 May 1948[80]
63 GuineaBroke diplomatic relations with Israel on 12 June 1967,[54] and restored relations on July 20, 2016.[13]
64 Guinea-BissauMarch 1994[81]Date diplomatic relations established
65 GuyanaBroke off relations in March 1974, restored in March 1992.
66 Haiti26 February 1949[56]January 1950[81]Date diplomatic relations established
67 Honduras[84][102]11 September 19488 November 1948[97]
68 Hungary[103]24 May 19481 June 1948[95]Relations broken in 1967, and restored on 19 September 1989.[104]
69 Iceland11 February 1949[56]
70 India17 September 1950[105]
 Indonesia[46]Can only travel to Indonesia with an invitation from the Department of Immigration of Indonesia. Can only enter Indonesia through airports in Denpasar, Jakarta and Surabaya.[22]
 Iran[106]6 March 1950[106][106]Voted against UN Partition Plan and voted against admission of Israel to membership of UN. Iranian government refrained from recognizing Israel de jure despite de facto recognition.[106] Relations severed on 18 February 1979.[107] Does not accept Israeli passports,[22] and the holders of Iranian passports are "not entitled to travel to the occupied Palestine"[108]
 Iraq[109]Does not accept Israeli passports, except for Iraqi Kurdistan where visa is required for passengers without a signed and stamped letter issued by the Ministry of Interior of the Kurdistan Regional Government if arriving at Erbil (EBL) and Sulaymaniyah (ISU).[22] Iraqi passports are not valid for travel to Israel.[110]
71 Ireland[111]12 February 1949May 1963[111]
72 Italy[56]8 February 194919 January 1950
73 Ivory Coast15 February 196124 May 1961[52]Date diplomatic relations established. Prior to this date, it had maintained trade relations since 15 February 1961. Relations severed in November 1973, and resumed in February 1986.[53][54]
74 Jamaica[97]January 1962
75 Japan15 May 1952[112]
76 Jordan26 October 1994[113]Signatory to the Khartoum Resolution.[33] Recognized Israel in the Israel–Jordan peace treaty.
77 Kazakhstan10 April 1992[114]Date diplomatic relations established
78 KenyaDecember 1963[97][115]Severed relation in November 1973,[54] resumed in December 1988.
79 Kiribati21 May 1984[116]Date diplomatic relations established
 Kuwait[33]Does not accept Israeli passports.[22]
80 KyrgyzstanMarch 1992[97]
81 LaosFebruary 1957Date diplomatic relations established. Laos broke off relations in 1973, and restored them on 6 December 1993.[117]
82 Latvia6 January 1992[118]Date diplomatic relations established
 Lebanon[33]Does not accept Israeli passports. Holders of passports containing any Israeli visa or stamp will be refused entry.[22]
83 Lesotho
84 Liberia11 February 1949[103]Relations severed in November 1973, and resumed in August 1983.[53][54]
 Libya[33]Does not accept Israeli passports.[22]
85 LiechtensteinJanuary 1992[97]
86 Lithuania8 January 1992[119]Date diplomatic relations established
87 Luxembourg11 May 1949[48]16 January 1950[120]
88 MadagascarRelations broken in October 1973,[54] and resumed in January 1994.
89 MalawiJuly 1964[81]Date diplomatic relations established
 Malaysia[46]Does not admit Israeli passport holders without written permission from the government. Malaysian passports not valid for travel to Israel without permission from the government.[121]
 Maldives29 October 1965[122]Diplomatic relations suspended in 1974.[123] Cooperation agreements in 2009 did not develop into full diplomatic relations[124][125][126] and were terminated in 2014.[127]
 Mali[20]Diplomatic relations severed 5 January 1973.[54]
90 MaltaJanuary 1965[97]December 1965[81]Date diplomatic relations established
91 Marshall Islands16 September 1987[128]
 Mauritania28 October 1999[129]Diplomatic relations suspended 6 March 2009,[130] severed 21 March 2010[131]
92 Mauritius[64]Diplomatic relations severed July 1976, restored September 1993.
93 Mexico11 May 1949[48]4 April 1952[132]
94 Moldova[133]22 June 1992
95 MonacoJanuary 1964[81]
96 Mongolia[134]2 October 1991
97 Montenegro[135]12 July 2006
98 Morocco[20][33]1 September 1994[136]Closed Israeli office and suspended relations in October 2000.[137] On 10 December 2020, an agreement was announced to normalize relations.[138]
99 Mozambique[64][65]23 July 1993
100 Myanmar[139]13 July 1953Date full diplomatic relations established
101 Namibia[65][140]11 February 1994
102 Nauru[81]December 1994
103   Nepal[141]1 June 1960Date diplomatic relations established. First South Asian nation to establish diplomatic ties with Israel.
104 Netherlands11 May 1949[48]16 January 1950[120]
105 New Zealand29 January 1949[56]28 July 1950[142]
106 Nicaragua18 May 1948[84]Diplomatic relations suspended June 2010 and restored in March 2017.[143]
 Niger[20]Relations severed on 4 January 1973.[52][54]
107 Nigeria[144]1960Relations broken in October 1973,[54] were resumed in May 1992.
 North Korea[145]North Korea and Israel held talks in 1993, but the talks were halted under pressure from the United States.[146] See Israel-North Korea relations for more details.
108 North Macedonia7 December 1995[81]Date diplomatic relations established
109 Norway4 February 1949Date Norway recognized Israel
 OmanJanuary 1996[137]A degree of relations established in January 1996. Closed Israeli office and suspended relations in October 2000.[137] Accepts Israeli passports for transit only, does not accept for admission.[22]
 Pakistan[147]Does not accept Israeli passports, and Pakistani passports are not valid for travel to Israel.[22]
110 Palau[64][65]2 October 1994
111 Panama19 June 1948[74]
112 Papua New Guinea1978[148]
113 Paraguay6 September 1948[84]7 September 1948[149]
114 Peru9 February 1949[56]
115 Philippines11 May 1949[48]13 May 1957[150]
116 Poland18 May 1948[80]Relations were broken in 1967, restored in February 1990.[151]
117 Portugal[152]12 May 1977
 Qatar[20]April 1996[81]In April 1996, Qatar and Israel agreed to exchange trade representation offices.[153] Trade offices closed in February 2009.[81]
Israeli-issued passports are not allowed in Qatar. The only time Israel will be allowed is during 2022 FIFA World Cup.[154][155]
118 Republic of the Congo9 November 1960Date diplomatic relations established. Broke relations on 31 December 1972, resumed in August 1991.
119 Romania[156]11 June 194812 June 1948[95]
120 Russia17 May 1948[80][157][158]Recognition extended as the Soviet Union. Relations broken in 1967, restored on 19 October 1991.[159]
121 RwandaRelations severed in October 1973,[54] and restored in October 1994.
122 Saint Kitts and NevisJanuary 1984[81]Date diplomatic relations established
123 Saint LuciaJanuary 1979[81]Date diplomatic relations established
124 Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesJanuary 1981[81]Date diplomatic relations established
125 SamoaJune 1977[81]Date diplomatic relations established
126 San Marino[160]1 March 1995
127 São Tomé and PríncipeNovember 1993[81]Date diplomatic relations established
 Saudi Arabia[33]Does not accept Israeli passports.[22]
128 Senegal1960[97]Relations broken in October 1973,[54] and resumed in August 1994.
129 Serbia31 January 1992Date diplomatic relations established[161]
130 SeychellesSeptember 1992[81]Date diplomatic relations established
131 Sierra LeoneRelations broken in October 1973,[54] and resumed in May 1992.
132 Singapore[162]11 May 1969Date diplomatic relations established
133 Slovakia18 May 1948[80]Recognition extended under Czechoslovakia. Relations under Czechoslovakia were severed between June 1967 and February 1990. Diplomatic relations with Slovakia were established 1 January 1993.[163]
134 Slovenia[164]28 April 1992
135 Solomon IslandsJanuary 1989[81]
 Somalia[165]
136 South Africa24 May 1948[80]14 May 1949[166][167]
137 South Korea10 April 1962[168]Date diplomatic relations established
138 South Sudan[169]28 July 2011Date given is the date full diplomatic relations were established.[170]
139 Spain[171]17 January 1986
140 Sri Lanka[172]16 September 1950
141 Sudan23 October 2020[173]On 23 October 2020, an agreement was announced to normalize relations.[173]
142 SurinameFebruary 1976[81]
143 Sweden[56]15 February 194913 June 1950[83]
144 Switzerland[174]28 January 194918 March 1949[175]
 Syria[33]Does not accept Israeli passports.[22]
145 TajikistanApril 1992[81]
146 TanzaniaRelations broken in October 1973,[54] and resumed in February 1995.
147 Thailand26 September 1950[176]
148 TogoRelations severed in September 1973,[54] and restored in June 1987.[53]
149 TongaJune 1977[81]Date diplomatic relations established
150 Trinidad and Tobago[81]August 1962
 Tunisia[33]3 October 1994[65][177][178]Joint declaration of relations made in January 1996. Closed the Israeli representative office and suspended relations in October 2000.[137]
151 Turkey28 March 1949[179]12 March 1950[180]Downgraded ties with Israel to second secretary level in September 2011,[181] and restored full diplomatic relations in June 2016.[182]
151 Turkmenistan[183]6 October 1993Date diplomatic relations established
153 TuvaluJuly 1984[81]Date diplomatic relations established
154 UgandaBroke relations on 30 March 1972,[54] and restored in July 1994.
155 Ukraine11 May 1949[48]26 December 1991[184]
156 United Arab Emirates13 August 2020[185]15 September 2020[44]On 15 September 2020, an agreement was signed to normalize relations.[185]
157 United Kingdom13 May 1949[186]28 April 1950[120]
158 United States14 May 1948[6]31 January 1949[187]
159 Uruguay19 May 1948[80]First Latin American country to recognize Israel.[188]
160 Uzbekistan[189]21 February 1992Date full diplomatic relations established
161 Vanuatu[64][65]16 December 1993Date diplomatic relations established
 Venezuela27 June 1948[84]Relations severed in January 2009.[190]
162 Vietnam[191]12 July 1993Date diplomatic relations established
 Yemen[33]Does not accept Israeli passports.[22]
163 ZambiaRelations broken in October 1973,[54] and resumed in December 1991.
164 Zimbabwe[64][65]26 November 1993Date diplomatic relations established

Non-UN member states

StateDate of recognitionNotes
 Cook Islands[192]2008
 Kosovo[lower-alpha 2]4 September 2020Kosovo recognised Israel as part of the Kosovo and Serbia economic normalization agreements (2020)[193][194][195] Diplomatic relations established on February 1, 2021.[196][197]
 Niue[198]2008
 State of Palestine[199]1993Signatory to the Khartoum Resolution.[33] Recognized Israel as part of the Oslo I Accord.
  Vatican City[200]15 June 1994

See also

Notes

  1. Non-Muslim states:
    Muslim-majority states:
  2. The political status of Kosovo is disputed. Having unilaterally declared independence from Serbia in 2008, Kosovo is formally recognised as an independent state by 100 UN member states (with another 13 states recognising it at some point but then withdrawing their recognition) and 93 states not recognizing it, while Serbia continues to claim it as part of its own sovereign territory.

References

  1. "un.org/en/members/ 3 July 2006".
  2. "Two Hundred and Seventh Plenary Meeting". The United Nations. 11 May 1949. Archived from the original on 12 September 2007. Retrieved 13 July 2007. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. Rossi, Michael; Pinos, Jaume Castan (2020-02-17). "Introduction to Inconvenient Realities: The Emergence and Resilience of Parastates". Nationalities Papers. 48 (1): 12–23. doi:10.1017/nps.2019.58. ISSN 0090-5992. S2CID 214574382. (p.12) Parastates are neither sovereign countries with limited recognition like Israel
  4. Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs: Declaration of Establishment of State of Israel: 14 May 1948: Retrieved 15 December 2013 Archived 21 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  5. End of Palestine mandate, The Times, 15 May 1948
  6. "Milestones: 1945-1952 - Office of the Historian". Retrieved 11 May 2021.
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  19. "United Nations Official Document". www.un.org. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016.
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  27. "At a sporting event in an Arab capital, an unexpected sound: The Israeli national anthem". The Washington Post. 27 November 2018.
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  29. Staff writers (9 January 2006). "Kabul will forge Israel ties if Palestinians form State: Karzai". Pak Tribune. Pakistan News Service. Retrieved 2011-08-05.
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