In Rome Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised the new Israel-Turkey rapprochement agreement saying the accord will strengthen Israel’s position in the region coming more than six years after the Mvavi Marmara incident, The Jerusalem Post reported. Netanyahu acknowledged both the world and region are going through tremendous changes and with the accord there will once again be a certain “stability” in the region. Netanyahu said he kept Greece, Cyprus, Egypt and Russia – all countries who have a fraught relationship with Turkey – in the loop regarding the negotiations leading up to the accord. Every move was also coordinated with the U.S., he said. As Netanyahu spoke in...