US Secretary of State Antony Blinken will hold his first meeting with new Foreign Minister Yair Lapid on Sunday.
Lapid will fly to Rome to meet Blinken, who will be in Italy as part of a trip to Europe, a US official said.
The meeting follows two phone calls the top diplomats held earlier this month as Washington intensified its contacts with the new government in Israel, which was sworn in on June 13. In the first call, Blinken congratulated Lapid on forming a coalition headed by Prime Minister Naftali Bennett.
The second call was more substantive, with the two discussing “the opportunities and ongoing challenges for Israel and the region,” according to the State Department.
“The Secretary discussed the US commitment to Israel’s security, the importance of the US- Israel bilateral relationship, and the need to improve Israeli-Palestinian relations in practical ways,” the statement said then.
According to a statement from Israel’s Foreign Ministry, “the two talked at length about a wide range of strategic issues including the security and political situation in the region.”
Both statements said the two also discussed Iran and ways to further Israel’s normalization with Arab states.
Blinken and Lapid agreed to a policy of “no surprises,” according to the Israeli statement, and will maintain open and regular communication channels, as well as plans to meet soon. Opposition chairman Benjamin Netanyahu pounced on reports of the call, claiming an Israeli commitment to keep the US in the loop regarding military actions it takes against Iran’s nuclear program would endanger the security of the Jewish state.
Like the previous government, the new one led by Bennett and Lapid is opposed to the Biden administration’s effort to re-enter the Iran nuclear deal known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action JCPOA. However, Lapid — and reportedly Bennett as well — have stressed that whatever their disagreements with the US, they plan to address them behind closed doors, rather than seeking public skirmishes the way Netanyahu had during the Obama administration.
Lapid met Blinken for the first time last month when the secretary of state was in Jerusalem as part of the US effort to strengthen the recently brokered ceasefire that ended an 11-day war between Israel and terror groups in Gaza.
Also this week, Lapid is set to visit the United Arab Emirates. Israel’s new foreign minister will officially inaugurate the Israeli embassy in Abu Dhabi and the consulate in Dubai during the trip on June 29-30. The trip will mark the first time an Israeli minister has visited the Gulf state in an official capacity.
Lazar Berman contributed to this report.