Outgoing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu revealed that Israel has secret relations with many Arab and Islamic countries, and that only three countries do not have relations with Israel.

"I develop relations with Arab and Muslim countries and I can tell you that only one, two or three of them do not have relations that are constantly strengthened with us," Netanyahu said in a speech to a conference of heads of American Jewish organizations in West Jerusalem.

He stressed that what he says is only 10% of what is happening in secret relations that unites Israel with Arab countries in the region.

He added that I visited with Sarah (his wife) the Sultanate of Oman about a year ago, and two weeks ago we made an impressive visit to the President of the Sudanese Council of Sovereignty (Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan), noting that Sudan is an Arab-speaking Islamic country that hosted the Khartoum conference that identified (the three noes against Israel) and now This is about launching an accelerated process of normalization.

And Netanyahu considered that these giant changes stem from the fact that Israel is a force that must be taken into consideration.

Addressing his words to the Arab countries, he said, "Cooperation with Israel helps guarantee the future and security of your peoples."

He pointed out that the first Israeli plane flew yesterday (Sunday) in the sky of Sudan, adding that Israeli tourists travel to South America for hiking, and the passage of their flights in Sudan would reduce the duration of the trip by three hours.

He added that they can now fly directly over Sudan on the way to Brazil or Argentina, and they can visit another country, Chad, which recently renewed its relations with us.

And Netanyahu's statement about the Israeli plane's flight in Sudan is the first official confirmation of the reports published by the Hebrew media in this regard.

On Sunday, Netanyahu said in a tweet on Twitter that an Israeli team would develop within days a plan to expand cooperation with Sudan, with the aim of bringing normalization to Khartoum.

In another tweet, he added, "Under the surface of the water, there are many operations that change the face of the Middle East and place Israel in the position of the great powers regionally and globally."

For the first time of its kind, an Israeli passenger plane (M-ABGG) crossed Sudanese airspace, en route from Kinshasa Airport in the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the Israeli Ben Gurion Airport.

On February 3, Netanyahu met in the Ugandan city of Entebbe with the proof, while popular protests in several Sudanese cities came out to condemn the move.

With the exception of Egypt and Jordan, no Arab country maintains open diplomatic relations with Israel, while the pace of normalization increased through Israeli participation in sports, cultural, and artistic activities established by Arab countries.