Egypt, Jordan, Palestine, and Turkey.
yes it is Of course. Israel proclaimed its Independence on 14 May of 1948 and defended it in four bloody wars started by Arab countries,Israel is a recognzed UN member and has full diplomatic relations with 157 countries
No. Singapore has actually taken a strongly neutral stance on the Middle East conflicts. It has open trade relations with all Middle Eastern countries, including Israel. This has put a strain on Singaporean-Malaysian and Singaporean-Indonesian relations since both of those countries refuse to recognize Israel.
Well actually, in the Middle East, Saudi Aarabia specialize in oil. So they are the ones who exports oil they do not import. But, if other Middle Eastern countries don't have oil, then they get the oil from Saudi Arabia. The oil is very expensive too! In the case of Israel, Israel imports oil from Egypt and from outside of the Middle East because other Middle Eastern countries do not have trade relations with Israel.
The Middle East.
There are countries in the Middle East that are not Arab, such as Iran, Turkey, and Israel.
No. Most countries in the Middle East are Arab, but Israel is not. Additionally, Turkey, Iran, and Cyprus are non-Arab Middle Eastern countries.
Two countries of the middle east are Israel and Iran.
The United States and Israel have very good relations. Israel is among the strongest ally that the United States has in the Middle East.
Israel became a member of the United Nations in May 1949, one year after its becoming a sovereign nation. In early 2011, of the 192 United Nations member states, Israel has full mutual diplomatic relations with 154. Since 1967, diplomatic relations have been established with several Arab and Muslim countries. Israel maintains full diplomatic relations and open borders with neighbouring Egypt and Jordan since signing peace treaties with them in 1979 and 1994 respectively.Some of the countries with which Israel has no diplomatic relations do accept Israeli passports, and acknowledge other Israeli marks of sovereignty.The following 36 members of the United Nations do not have diplomatic relations with Israel:Algeria, Chad, Comoros, Djibouti, Guinea, Libya, Mali, Morocco, Mauritania, Niger, Somalia, Sudan, Tunisia, Bolivia, Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela, North Korea, Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Yemen, United Arab Emirates, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan*, Pakistan, Brunei, Malaysia, and Indonesia.*Bhutan allows India to conduct the majority of its foreign relations, and has direct relations with fewer than 50 countries.Answer:Currently (2013), 160 of the 192 other UN member states (83%) recognize Israel. In the Middle East, the countries that recognize Israel are Egypt, Jordan, and Turkey.
Israel, Turkey, and Lebanon are considered middle east countries.
Israel.
With the exception of Israel, all Middle Eastern countries are Muslim-majority.