Israel-Hamas war: Saudi Arabia faced with balancing act

For months, the process of normalising Saudi-Israeli ties was seen by Saudi Arabia and Israel as offering political and economic advantages to both countries while also leading to more stability

Update: 2024-02-19 09:30 GMT

Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud

GAZA: The war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza is increasingly influencing Saudi Arabia’s foreign and domestic policies. “The situation has become a delicate balancing act for Saudi Arabia,” Sebastian Sons, senior researcher for the German think tank CARPO, told DW. “The current war offers a possibility to correct years of relatively little Saudi commitment on behalf of the Palestinians, while at the same time, Saudi Arabia, the guardian of two holy sites in Islam, continues to pursue its normalisation efforts with Israel,” Sons said.

For months, the process of normalising Saudi-Israeli ties, one promoted by the US, was seen by Saudi Arabia and Israel as offering political and economic advantages to both countries while also leading to more stability in the region.

However, negotiations stalled — though they have not been called off — after Hamas, which is classified as a terrorist organisation by Germany, the European Union, the United States, and some Arab states, attacked Israel’s south on October 7 and killed about 1,160 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.

Israel’s retaliation in the Gaza Strip has since caused around 29,000 deaths, according to the Hamas-run Ministry of Health in the Palestinian enclave. For Sami Hamdi, managing director of the London-based consulting company The International Interest, the “very insistence that normalisation is still possible, despite the astronomical death toll in Gaza, suggests that for Saudi Arabia, there aren’t really any red lines that will result in abandoning the normalisation process,” he told DW.

Nonetheless, amid the war, Saudi support for the Palestinian cause is now increasingly reflected in Riyadh’s approach to that normalisation. “During the rapprochement between Saudi Arabia and Israel, we observed a marginalisation of the Palestinian issue, but due to this war, a possible relationship with Israel is once again linked to a political solution for the Palestinians,” Peter Lintl, Middle East researcher at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs, told DW.

According to several reports, Saudi Arabia told Washington earlier in February that it would not establish ties with Israel until an independent Palestinian state is recognised and Israeli forces leave Gaza. Saudi Arabia’s new position can also be seen in one of the latest statements on Israel’s plans to start an offensive on Rafah, Gaza’s most southern city, which is now home to more than 1.3 million displaced Gazans.

Last Saturday, Saudi Arabia warned Israel of the “very serious repercussions of storming and targeting the city of Rafah in the Gaza Strip.” “The current condemnation of Israel regarding Rafah is a clear indicator that Saudi Arabia is trying to strengthen its position,” Sons said. However, what exactly such repercussions will be is a question that remains open for interpretation. Meanwhile, it is not only Saudi Arabia’s political stance that has hardened: The mood in the kingdom has also changed.

Parts of the Saudi public, which has been traditionally very supportive of the Palestinians and their quest for an independent state within the 1967 borders with East Jerusalem as its capital, have started to voice support for the Iran-backed Hamas militia. This is despite the fact that Hamas still belongs to Saudi Arabia’s ideological opponents — Iran and its so-called axis of resistance — even if ties have been thawing between Tehran and Riyadh.

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