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After US-Saudi pact, new West Asia in the making
Hindustan Times Bengaluru
|November 27, 2025
For India, the era of viewing the Gulf solely through the prism of energy and diaspora is over, it is now a high-stakes theatre of national security
The recent visit of Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) to Washington marks a definitive turning point in both the regional and global order.
Coming ata period of intense geopolitical flux, the visit did more than restore the de facto Saudi leader's diplomatic standing in the West, dented by the 2018 Jamal Khashoggi affair; it fundamentally redefined the US-Saudi alliance.
Hosted with full ceremonial honours by President Donald J Trump, including a South Lawn arrival, a State dinner, and Oval Office bilateral, this was MBS's first White House engagement since 2018. It signals a sharp return to transactional realism in US foreign policy, prioritising shared security imperatives and economic interdependence over ideological constraints. In an era of great-power competition and Middle Eastern volatility, the visit underscores Riyadh’s enduring centrality to Washington’s regional architecture. Geopolitically, the summit represents a robust reaffirmation of the US-Saudi axis as the lynchpin for containing Iranian revisionism and countering Beijing's inroads in the Gulf. Under the Biden administration, ties had deteriorated to a “managed estrangement,” pushing Riyadh toward alternatives like the 2023 China-brokered détente with Tehran and deeper Brics engagement.
The Trump-led reset dispels any notion of US retrenchment. By designating Saudi Arabia a Major Non-Nato Ally (MNNA) and signing the Strategic Defence Agreement (SDA), Washington has elevated Riyadh’s status without the encumbrances of a formal treaty. This framework embodies a pragmatic evolution of the 1945 Quincy Pact: It facilitates US defence industry operations in the Kingdom, while securing Saudi financial contributions to offset basing and training expenses, ensuring flexibility amid US congressional scepticism.
This story is from the November 27, 2025 edition of Hindustan Times Bengaluru.
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