Saudi Arabia and Israel Deprioritise Diplomacy: Normalisation No Longer a Middle-East Priority
As Gaza war and regional tensions deepen, Riyadh shifts focus to ceasefire and economic diversification — putting formal ties with Israel on hold
Saudi Arabia has effectively stepped back from pursuing full diplomatic normalisation with Israel, marking a sharp shift from earlier optimism around broader Middle East peace efforts.
The kingdom’s leadership now emphasises a permanent ceasefire in Gaza and a resolution of the Palestinian issue as prerequisites for any progress.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and senior officials have declined to advance normalisation plans despite renewed US-backed initiatives linking defence cooperation with diplomatic recognition.
Riyadh’s recalibration follows the war triggered by the October 2023 Hamas attack, and Israel’s subsequent military campaign in Gaza — developments that have hardened public opinion across the Arab world and undermined political momentum for the kind of open ties once envisaged by proponents of the Abraham Accords.
Saudi foreign-policy statements now underscore that recognition and cooperation require substantial progress toward Palestinian statehood, including key concessions on occupied territories.
At the same time, the kingdom has realigned its priorities, advancing economic diversification under its Vision 2030 plan: the sovereign fund is channeling investment toward sectors such as artificial intelligence, logistics, and tourism rather than geopolitical alignment.
The 2025 summit with the United States focused heavily on defence agreements and investment, while formal normalisation — once portrayed as the ‘holy grail’ of Gulf diplomacy — was notably absent.
Analysts note that Riyadh’s strategic patience may serve domestic and regional interests better: it avoids alienating public sentiment, preserves leverage, and allows Saudi Arabia to retain negotiating options with both Western allies and other regional powers.
Meanwhile, Israel and its partners continue to express interest in the long-term payoff of normalisation, but observers say a major breakthrough now seems unlikely in the near term — especially as Israeli policy under Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu remains at odds with Saudi red lines.
For the time being, normalization with Israel remains off the agenda.
Saudi Arabia appears focused instead on stabilizing its regional position, deepening economic transformation, and preserving flexibility until a diplomatic environment emerges that respects its declared red lines.