Jared Kushner, U.S. President Donald Trump's son-in-law and advisor, is due to arrive Tuesday in Morocco from Israel on the first direct commercial flight between the two countries since they normalized ties.
The flight from Tel Aviv to Rabat is seen as highly symbolic after Morocco announced on December 10 a "resumption of relations" with Israel.
It also aims to showcase the achievements of the Trump administration in Middle East diplomacy, weeks before Trump is replaced at the White House by President-elect Joe Biden.
Morocco became the third Arab state this year, after the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, to normalize ties with Israel under U.S.-brokered deals, while Sudan has pledged to follow suit.
In return, the U.S. president fulfilled a decades-old goal of Morocco by backing its contested sovereignty in Western Sahara.
The move infuriated the Algerian-backed pro-independence Polisario Front, which controls about one fifth of the desert territory that was once a Spanish colony.
Kushner will be heading an American delegation, and during his visit to Rabat a series of agreements will be signed between Morocco and Israel, according to officials.
The Israeli delegation will be led by National Security Advisor Meir Ben-Shabbat, incidentally a son of Morroco-born Jews.
Speaking at a Jerusalem ceremony alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday, Kushner said normalization with Morocco "will bring about a whole new set of opportunities for northern Africa and the entire Middle East."
"Our collective efforts have led to the birth of a new Middle East, where firsts and breakthroughs are now happening almost every day," Kushner said.
Negotiations leading to Morocco's resumption of ties with Israel included the opening of a US consulate in Western Sahara, and US investments which Moroccan media described as "colossal".
At the same time Israel and Morocco are due to reopen diplomatic offices and activate economic cooperation between them.
Speaking after Kushner, Netanyahu lauded what he dubbed a commercial "revolution" unleashed by the US-brokered normalization agreement between Israel and the UAE, which he promised would spread to Morocco.
"Everybody is busy embracing everyone else, and they're busy doing business together," he said of Israelis and Emiratis.
"And the same thing now is going to happen in Rabat and Casablanca; yes, Israelis have been there before, but with direct flights, it's going to be a whole different thing."
Morocco closed its liaison office in Tel Aviv in 2000, at the start of the second Palestinian intifada, or uprising.
King Mohammed VI has said Morocco will remain an advocate for the Palestinians, but the Palestinians -- like the Polisario -- have cried foul and condemned the normalization announcement between Rabat and the Jewish state.
- 'Shared history' -
Morocco has sought to temper the anger by insisting that relations with Israel are not new.
"The new agreement is merely the formalization of a de facto partnership between Morocco and Israel dating back 60 years," said Moroccan media boss Ahmed Charai.
In a commentary published earlier this month in the Jerusalem Post, he said the two countries had a "shared history", adding that he was "overcome with pride and gratitude" when the deal was announced.
"It is indeed the case that the two states have assisted each other vitally for decades," Charai wrote.
"Not only did intelligence and security cooperation help Israel defend itself in the 1967 Six-Day War and Morocco win its Sahara war a few years later, quiet Moroccan diplomacy proved instrumental in fostering peace between Egypt and Israel," he added.
Morocco is home to North Africa's largest Jewish community, which has been there since ancient times and grew with the arrival of Jews expelled from Spain by Catholic kings from 1492.
It reached about 250,000 in the late 1940s, 10 percent of the national population, but many Jews left after the creation of Israel in 1948.
About 3,000 Jews remain in Morocco, and the Casablanca community is one of the country's most active.
Israel meanwhile is home to 700,000 Jews of Moroccan origin.
Although ties between the two countries were suspended in the year 2000, trade between Israel and Morocco was not.
Between 2014 and 2017 the volume of trade exchanges stood at $149 million, according to statistics published by Moroccan newspapers.
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