
Indonesia’s President Makes History: ‘Shalom’ Concludes Groundbreaking UN Address
World’s largest Muslim nation signals readiness to join Abraham Accords framework, promising new era of Middle East peace
Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto delivers his groundbreaking address to the 80th UN General Assembly, marking a pivotal moment in Middle East diplomacy, Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2025. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)
In a moment that will be remembered as a turning point in Middle East diplomacy, Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto concluded his historic United Nations address with the Hebrew word “Shalom,” signaling Indonesia’s readiness to embrace a new chapter of peace and cooperation with Israel. This unprecedented gesture from the world’s most populous Muslim nation opens the door to potentially expanding the transformative Abraham Accords.
This breakthrough moment represents the most significant development in Abraham Accords expansion since the landmark 2020 agreements. With Indonesia’s 270+ million Muslims potentially joining the growing coalition of Arab and Muslim nations normalizing relations with Israel, the prospects for lasting Middle East peace have never been brighter.
🌅 Dawn of a New Era
– President Prabowo Subianto
President Subianto’s words echo the fundamental principles that have made the Abraham Accords so successful: mutual recognition, shared security, and economic cooperation. His vision represents not just a policy shift, but a generational transformation in how the Islamic world views the path to Palestinian statehood and regional stability.
✨ Promising Path Forward
Indonesia’s Game-Changing Commitments:
- Immediate recognition of Israel upon Palestinian statehood acknowledgment
- Deployment of up to 20,000 peacekeepers to secure Gaza peace
- Guarantee of Israeli security as cornerstone of regional stability
- Extension of peacekeeping commitment to global conflict zones
- Opening diplomatic channels for Abraham Accords integration
📈 Building on Abraham Accords Success
The Abraham Accords have already demonstrated the transformative power of peace through prosperity. Trade between Israel and Abraham Accords nations has skyrocketed, tourism has flourished, and technological cooperation has accelerated innovation across the region. Indonesia’s potential participation would multiply these benefits exponentially.
🤝 Bridge-Building Diplomacy
President Subianto’s conditional recognition formula—Indonesian recognition of Israel upon Palestinian statehood—offers a practical roadmap that honors both Israeli security needs and Palestinian aspirations. This balanced approach mirrors the Abraham Accords’ success in creating win-win scenarios for all parties.
🌍 Global Peace Architecture
Indonesia’s offer to deploy 20,000 peacekeepers to Gaza represents more than military commitment—it demonstrates genuine investment in peace dividends. This substantial force would provide the security framework necessary for economic development, humanitarian aid, and eventual two-state implementation.
🔮 Vision 2030: Expanded Abraham Accords
Imagine a Middle East where Indonesia’s vast economy, technological innovation, and peaceful Islamic leadership joins the Abraham Accords framework. Combined with existing members—UAE, Bahrain, Sudan, Morocco—plus potential future partners, we could witness the most significant peace dividend in modern history.
🎯 Catalyzing Regional Transformation
Indonesia’s diplomatic breakthrough could inspire other major Muslim nations to reconsider their positions. With the world’s fourth-most populous country leading by example, the Abraham Accords framework offers a proven template for achieving what many thought impossible: sustainable Arab-Israeli peace with Palestinian state prospects intact.
President Subianto’s historic closing word, opening infinite possibilities
🚀 Momentum for Peace
This historic moment comes as Abraham Accords nations continue to demonstrate that peace creates prosperity, security enables development, and cooperation transcends historical grievances. Indonesia’s potential participation would bring Southeast Asian economic dynamism, Islamic scholarly tradition, and demographic weight to an already successful peace framework.
As President Subianto concluded with “Shalom,” he didn’t just speak a word—he opened a door to possibilities that could reshape the Middle East for generations to come. The Abraham Accords have proven that peace is possible; Indonesia’s gesture suggests that peace is becoming inevitable.
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