Foreign policy wins under Joe Biden’s administration have been in short supply. Yes, the president has done an admirable job cobbling together a durable coalition with Europe on behalf of Ukraine as it defends itself against Russia’s aggression. And unlike previous administrations, which paid lip service to the Indo-Pacific being a priority, Biden actually seems to believe it — the State Department and Pentagon have spent considerable time bringing East Asian allies onside and even brokered an entente of sorts between Japan and South Korea, two U.S. allies who had a years-long spat over World War II-era history.
You only need to take a glance at what the U.S. would have to give up in order to get the deal Biden craves so badly.
Still, the kinds of grandiose diplomatic agreements that earn presidents privileged spots in the history books are nowhere to be found. Richard Nixon had his pivot to China and detente with the Soviet Union. Jimmy Carter had the Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt. Ronald Reagan had the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty with Mikhail Gorbachev. Bill Clinton had the Oslo Accords between the Israelis and Palestinians (although we all know how that turned out). Barack Obama had the Iran nuclear deal. Biden, so far, has nothing.
An Israel-Saudi normalization deal is supposed to change all that. In the administration’s view, it would have transformational potential for the Middle East. Israel and Saudi Arabia, two of Washington’s closest partners in the region, would finally bring their relations out into the open after years in which they collaborated in the intelligence sphere. Biden, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) would all win: Biden would surpass the Trump administration’s Abraham Accords; Netanyahu would earn the honor of being the Israeli premier who normalized the Jewish state’s ties with the most significant power in the Arab world; and MBS would get a crucial partner to contain Iranian influence.
What’s good for Biden’s legacy, however, isn’t necessarily what’s good for the United States. While that may sound overly politicized, you only need to take a glance at what the U.S. would have to give up in order to get the deal Biden craves so badly.
First, it’s important to note just how difficult it will be to actually bring Israel-Saudi normalization to fruition. In fact, the phrase “Israel-Saudi normalization” is a bit deceptive because the U.S. and the Palestinians are also involved in the process. Before Oct. 7, Riyadh would likely have been content with extracting a few token concessions from Israel on behalf of the Palestinians in return for normalizing ties. But with more than 34,700 Palestinians killed, Gaza leveled under the weight of Israeli bombs and hunger a widespread problem in the territory — a problem that will only grow worse as Israeli forces begin operations in Rafah, where most of Gaza’s humanitarian aid flows in — MBS can’t be perceived as turning his back on the Palestinian file. The Saudis are now demanding “a credible, irreversible track for the implementation of a two-state solution” as a price.
“Israel-Saudi normalization” is a bit deceptive because the U.S. and the Palestinians are also involved in the process.
What a “credible, irreversible track” toward a two-state solution actually means is open for debate. But even a mere process might be too much for Netanyahu to contemplate. He is dead set against the establishment of a Palestinian state and has repeated that mantra many times over the last few months. Netanyahu’s political career is held entirely in the hands of ultranationalist ministers, like Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, who seem to regard all Palestinians as terrorists and would rather annex Gaza and the West Bank into Israel. Netanyahu has little room to maneuver: He can either accede to Riyadh’s demands on the Palestinian file and lose his coalition or keep his coalition intact and hope the Saudis change their position.
Even if the Palestinian issue gets resolved — there are rumors Riyadh might be willing to delink the Palestinian piece in order to salvage a U.S. defense guarantee, although the State Department denied such a scheme was in the works — it’s difficult to see why the agreement currently under discussion serves U.S. interests anyway.
The problem isn’t Israel-Saudi normalization per se, but rather what the U.S. is willing to pay to get it. And frankly, the price is far too high for what the U.S. is getting in return.








