Yes - you can. You would be denied entry if you are an Israeli passport holder.
Courtesy - Air Ambulance International
vibha.info
Yes but you may be better off not getting the stamp in your passport. You can ask them to stamp a piece of paper instead.
Risky. Ask your travel agent or UAE embassy.
Turkey has full diplomatic relations with Israel and has no problem with people having an Israeli visa or entry stamp in their passport.
You can't. At least not on the same passport. You should have asked the Israeli officials to put the stamp on a small slip of paper you would have carried in your passport.
Yes. Israel and Qatar have diplomatic relations.
Of course you can. You can enter just about any non-Arab country with an Israeli stamp. Even amongst Arab countries (the ones who don't accept Israeli passports) there are maybe 5 that won't grant entry because of an Israeli stamp.
Yes, although they may not travel on an Israeli passport, the UAE as most Arab nations does not recogonise the governement state of Israel. The same applies to anyone visiting who may have an Israeli entry or exit stamp in their passport.
People with an Israeli passport or an Israeli stamp/visa in their passport, are denied access to the UAE. If you go to Emirates.com (UAE's wealthy national carrier), you'll see that upon booking the code TLV (Tel-Aviv Ben Gurion) isn't even listed. Though the UAE does not want people in relation with Israel to enter their country, even if they've just visited, there are ways Israelis or people who have visited Israel can enter the UAE. Israeli's may have multiple passports (for example a US passport additional to his Israeli passport). Jews in general may go to Dubai, anyway there is no way to figure out someone's religion.
No. Oman does not accept Israeli passports.
If it's a valid US passport or you are a dual-citizen most likely
Yes, you can
Yes, and No. Several Arab and North African countries do not consider Israel a legitimate state, and therefore have no diplomatic relationship with it. Those countries that have no diplomatic relations with Israel will, in some cases, reject a passport that contains an Israeli Visa. (A Visa being the stamp given upon arrival, or any other official document or stamp given by Israeli passport officials.) Israel, recognizing this, allows the option of stamping a loose-leaf insert to the passport that can be removed before travel to a state that does not recognize Israel. (It is worth noting, however, that Arab border police at crossings with Israel are not as kind. Most Arab countries that ban Israeli stamps will also deny entry to someone who crossed at an Israeli crossing like Taba or Wadi Arabah with only the Arab stamp.)