The Middle East has always been a region where diplomacy moves at its own unpredictable pace sometimes glacial, sometimes explosive.
Right now, it's somewhere in between, stuck on a question that sounds simple but carries centuries of weight: Can Muslim-majority nations normalize relations with Israel while the Palestinian situation remains unresolved? The answer coming from capitals across the Islamic world is a resounding and unified no, and that stance is creating some genuinely fascinating friction in global diplomacy.
President Trump returned to office with big ambitions for the region. His administration saw an opportunity to reshape Middle Eastern alliances in a way that would isolate Iran while bringing more Arab states into Israel's growing circle of diplomatic partners. The Abraham Accords, originally signed during his first term, served as the template but the expansion Trump was pushing for has run into a wall of resistance that few anticipated would hold this strong.


