In a brief but diplomatically significant statement issued on Wednesday, the Saudi Foreign Ministry signaled Riyadh’s preference for a negotiated settlement to the longstanding tensions between Tehran and Washington, rather than continued military confrontation or a fragile ceasefire.
“We support the achievement of a permanent agreement between the United States and Iran that realizes security and stability,” the ministry stated.
A Shift Toward Diplomatic Engagement
The statement marks a continuation of the recent diplomatic thaw between the Islamic Republic and the Kingdom, which resumed bilateral relations in 2023 following a seven-year rupture, under a landmark agreement brokered by the People’s Republic of China. Riyadh’s explicit backing of a US-Iran accord underscores the Kingdom’s strategic calculus that its own ambitious domestic development agenda—outlined in Vision 2030—cannot flourish amidst the constant threat of regional warfare.
Saudi officials have repeatedly stressed in recent years that they view diplomacy as the only viable pathway to resolving outstanding disputes in the Persian Gulf and the broader Middle East. The Kingdom’s endorsement of a “permanent” resolution, rather than a temporary truce, reflects concerns that an unstable Iran-US dynamic inevitably spills over into the security of the Persian Gulf’s maritime chokepoints and energy infrastructure.











