Israel hails UAE space launch bid

Sarah Al Amiri, deputy project manager of the UAE Mars Mission, during a ceremony to unveil the mission in Dubai.

Occupied Jerusalem - "We wish the UAE the best of luck on the launch of this scientific mission," the foreign ministry's 'Israel in the Gulf' Twitter account wrote in Arabic.

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By AFP

Published: Tue 9 Jun 2020, 11:07 PM

Last updated: Wed 10 Jun 2020, 1:20 AM

In another sign of warming ties between Israel and Gulf Arab nations, the Jewish state Tuesday congratulated the UAE on its bid to launch the first Arab space probe.  
The UAE announced last month that it would launch a mission to Mars in July.
Also read: UAE's first Arab mission to Mars designed to inspire youth
The unmanned probe, named 'Hope', has been billed as "the first interplanetary exploration undertaken" by an Arab state.
"We wish the UAE the best of luck on the launch of this scientific mission, and hope this step will contribute towards deeper cooperation between all countries in the region," the foreign ministry's "Israel in the Gulf" Twitter account wrote in Arabic.
Except for Jordan and Egypt, Arab countries have no official relations with Israel.
But Arab states in the Gulf like the UAE have been warming ties with Israel recently amid shared concerns over Iran.
The UAE made its first publicly announced flight to Israel last month when its Etihad Airways sent medical aid for Palestinians to combat the coronavirus pandemic.
Arab countries have called for a settlement to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict as a condition for normalising ties with the Jewish state.
The Arab League frequently condemns Jewish settlement construction in the occupied West Bank as well as Israel's policy toward the Gaza Strip.
But Gulf Arab states have shown signs of a rapprochement with Israel. 
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited Oman in 2018, and Israeli athletes and officials have being increasingly allowed to visit the Gulf states.
UAE's WAM said the Hope probe would be launched on July 15 from Japan's Tanegashima Space Centre.
It is set to make a 495-million-kilometre (307-million-mile) journey to reach and orbit Mars.
Last September, Hazza Al Mansouri made history as the first Emirati in space.

AFP

Published: Tue 9 Jun 2020, 11:07 PM

Last updated: Wed 10 Jun 2020, 1:20 AM

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