Israel
Former US Envoy Says Breakthrough With Saudis on Israel Unlikely Soon
|By
Belaaz HQ2 MIN READ
Published Nov. 28, 2025, 12:47 PM
Israel

Former US ambassador to Saudi Arabia Michael Ratney said in a Friday interview with i24NEWS that American and Saudi officials had been edging close to a normalization framework before the October 7 massacre derailed the entire process, leaving Riyadh deeply frustrated.
Ratney explained that Saudi Arabia’s pursuit of F-35 fighter jets is “largely symbolic,” serving as a message about the depth of the strategic partnership with Washington rather than a practical necessity. He added that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman wants to see the Gaza fighting fully end and expects significant shifts in Israeli policy toward the Palestinian issue before advancing toward normalization.
According to Ratney, meaningful progress is unlikely in the near future — and possibly not under Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s leadership.
His comments emerged as new details surfaced about the November 18 Oval Office meeting between President Donald Trump and the crown prince. Three sources told Axios earlier this week that Trump had hoped the end of the Gaza war would open the door to a breakthrough on Saudi-Israel ties and pressed MBS directly to join the Abraham Accords.
White House officials had already briefed MBS ahead of the visit that Trump expected movement on normalization. But when Trump raised the issue in the private meeting and insisted on progress, the exchange grew heated, officials said.
The crown prince pushed back, explaining that while he wants to move forward, Saudi society is currently “highly anti-Israel” following the Gaza war and “isn’t ready” for such a step. Despite cordial public statements from both leaders, the private discussion underscored the significant gap that remains.
Ratney noted that prior to October 7, the normalization effort had been close to success, but the terrorists’ attack “upended everything” and halted what had appeared to be real momentum.
Trump said a few days before the meeting that Saudi Arabia is expected to join the Abraham Accords “very shortly,” citing “tremendous interest” in normalization.
MOST READ



