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With Trump’s return, will the Abraham Accords make a comeback?

The last time the president was in power, Israel made peace with Arab nations for the first time in decades

December 10, 2024 09:30
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Benjamin Netanyahu and Donald Trump participate in the signing ceremony of the Abraham Accords (Getty Images)
4 min read

Two months ago, when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivered his "blessing and curse" speech at the UN—framing the curse as Iran's evil axis and the blessing as the Abraham Accords, which could expand further—he mainly had two countries in mind: Saudi Arabia and Indonesia.

These could have been two strategic, game-changing agreements that would have dealt a significant blow to Iran's plans of imposing a siege and an all-Islamic war against Israel. But the Hamas war temporarily halted both.

Now, Trump and his team are putting these advanced drafts back on the table, shaking off the dust and actively seeking to push them forward.

First in line is Saudi Arabia, the guardian of Islam's holy sites and the world's largest oil exporter. Riyadh's fear and loathing of Iran has led the kingdom over the past year to manage two seemingly contradictory relationships: one with the US and the West, with a wink toward Israel, and another with Russia and Iran, alongside gestures toward the Palestinians.