The US is focusing its efforts on November 18, the date of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's visit, during which an expanded defensive pact and new arms deals between the two countries are expected to be announced.
The administration is aiming for November 18, the date of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's visit to the US. During the visit, the two sides are expected to announce an expanded defensive pact and new arms deals, even before resolving Saudi Arabia's demand for independent uranium enrichment.
Statements by senior Iranian officials about their determination to rebuild damaged nuclear sites and continue enrichment are likely to be used by bin Salman to justify his nuclear ambitions. In light of this, he is expected to add the demand to the list of conditions for normalizing ties with Israel, after his previous request for a roadmap toward an Israeli-Palestinian political horizon was incorporated into Trump's 20-point plan.
Saudi Arabia, which welcomed the Gaza ceasefire and voiced hopes for stability, remains, like the United Arab Emirates, skeptical about the feasibility of Trump's plan for ending the war. Both nations have conditioned their participation in Gaza's reconstruction on a sustained and stable ceasefire, a phased Israeli withdrawal, the disarmament of the Hamas terrorist organization, and the transfer of authority to the Palestinian Authority or another internationally recognized body.
Trump and his team are likely to try to bundle these stipulations into the normalization deal Israel would be expected to accept. About a week before bin Salman's visit, Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa is scheduled to visit Washington, where bilateral relations will be discussed. However, his ties with Israel are also likely to come up, in light of ongoing talks aimed at establishing security arrangements between the two countries. (Read More)
