
The Times of Israel Daily Briefing Lazar Berman: Are Saudis moving away from Israel and toward Islamists?
Feb 13, 2026
Amanda Borschel-Dan, journalist and foreign-policy analyst on Middle Eastern geopolitics. She breaks down the Saudi-UAE rivalry, shifting ties with Turkey and Qatar, and the role of Yemen and regional proxies. Short, sharp takes on Riyadh’s rhetoric versus its strategic moves and what that might mean for possible normalization with Israel.
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Normalization Was Once Seen As Inevitable
- Before October 7, 2023, Benjamin Netanyahu declared Saudi-Israeli normalization was "inevitable" and on the cusp of a breakthrough.
- The October 7 war delayed talks and changed Saudi calculations about timing and risk around normalization.
Yemen Exposed Saudi–UAE Strategic Rift
- Saudi-UAE rivalry exploded over divergent backing in Yemen, notably the Saudis supporting the internationally recognized government and the UAE backing the STC.
- Saudi media framed the UAE as "agents of the Zionists," fuelling anti-Emirati and anti-Israel rhetoric that alarms observers.
Riyadh Tests New Regional Partnerships
- Saudis have moved closer to Turkey and Qatar, prompting worries they might align with an Islamist bloc instead of a pro-Western one.
- Analysts suggest Riyadh saw Turkey and Qatar pay no U.S. price for supporting Islamist groups, altering Saudi cost–benefit calculations.

