None of the countries bordering Israel are electoral democracies, or free, according to Freedom House's definitions. Egypt, Syria, Jordan and the Palestinian Territories are defined as 'not free'. Lebanon is considered 'partly free,' but still not a functioning electoral democracy.
See links below for the data.
The two countries that border Israel and are also democracies are Egypt and Lebanon. The capital city of each of the two countries are Cairo and Egypt respectively. It is worth noting that both Lebanon and Egypt are highly illiberal democracies.
This is a null set. All of the countries that border Israel are non-democratic. Jordan and Lebanon have a certain degree of suffrage and voting, but they are not true democracies in that the most powerful persons in the government (the King and Hezbollah militants, respectively) are un-elected.
Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Egypt share a land border with Israel. Also the Mediterranean Sea, the earth's atmosphere, and the Palestinian territories, although none of these are countries.
There are four UN-recognized Arab countries that surround Israel: Egypt, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon. The two Arab Palestinian states (Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip and Fatah-controlled West Bank) also border Israel.
Jordan and Egypt made peace with Israel, but Lebanon and Syria also have no interest in just antagonizing Israel anymore, since Israel is much more militarily capable than either of those two countries.
The countries that share international boundaries with Israel are Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Egypt.
I am not sure what you are asking. If you mean how did the forces from those Arab armies enter Israel, the answer is simple. All four of the countries that bordered Israel were a subset of the seven invading countries. The tanks literally just crossed the border. If you are asking about how Israel was unable to repel them immediately, the answer is also simple, Israel did not have the manpower to do that.
-- Lebanon -- Syria -- Jordan -- Egypt (Of course, this answer ignores that Israel borders the partially-recognized country of Palestine and the unrecognized country of Hamas-Controlled Gaza.)
All of these countries are Arab countries in the Levant region of the Middle East.
It depends on how you define Palestine. If you define it as the territories under the de facto control of the Palestinian Authority, it only borders Israel. If you consider only the territories of the West Bank, even those under de facto Israeli control, it borders both Israel and Jordan. If you consider all of the Palestinian Territories, also including the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, it borders Israel, Jordan, and Egypt. If you consider the former Mandate of Palestine that many Arabs use when they discuss Palestine replacing Israel, it would border Jordan, Egypt, Syria, and Lebanon (but no Israel since Israel would be gone).
It's not necessarily good for the US, but Israel is located in an area where there are no other democracies and is very near the oil. The USA does not like conversing with countries that are not democracies; thus, Israel is sort of an envoy for the USA and the USA supplies Israel with about three billion dollars to spend on American made weapons and other goods a year. _________second opinion___________ (i do not think i should sush the other guy because i do not agree with him) Israel is a democracy and in the middle east that doesn't exist. Israel can sell technology (military and otherwise) to the US
No.However, Saudi Arabia's land border with Jordan along the Gulf of Aqaba is less than 10 miles from the Israeli city of Eilat, also on the Gulf of Aqaba.