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Opinion

The Abraham Accords offer the best hope for the future

With imminent threats from Iran and its proxies removed, the region faces a rare window of opportunity to return to the path of further normalisation and mutual prosperity

July 8, 2025 11:46
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Natanyahu and Trump meet at the White House (Image: Getty)
2 min read

On October 6, 2023 – what now feels like an eternity ago – Israel stood on the cusp of a transformative diplomatic breakthrough: normalising relations with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the symbolic heart of Islam and largest economy in the Middle East.

Such an agreement would have marked the crowning achievement of the Abraham Accords, building on historic deals already established during President Trump’s first term in office between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan. These accords were not just merely symbolic gestures. They reflected a pragmatic alignment of interests involving economic cooperation, cultural exchange and shared security concerns.

In the first three years following the signing of the 2020 Abraham Accords, the pace of integration between Israel and its new Arab partners was seismic. Trade between Israel and the Abraham Accords countries surged from virtually nothing in 2019 to over $10 billion by 2023. Tourism also boomed. More than one million Israelis – almost a tenth of the country’s citizenry – visited the UAE during that time, supported by more than 200 weekly direct flights between the two countries.

Saudi Arabia formalising ties with the State of Israel back in October 2023 would have pushed this progress to an entirely new level, further isolating the Islamic Republic of Iran and its web of terror proxies and creating real momentum toward a more stable and integrated Middle East. Riyadh is a regional economic powerhouse. It is also a religious and cultural authority as the birthplace of Islam and home to the religion’s two holiest cities, Mecca and Medina.

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