13-05-2025
An opportunity to re-anchor the Saudi-US relationship in a shared strategy
As US President Donald Trump visits Riyadh for a high-stakes visit to Saudi Arabia, the geopolitical and economic landscape he navigates is more fractured — and more fluid — than at any point in recent decades.
This official visit to the Kingdom, his first foreign trip of a second term, comes amid the breakdown of long-standing global trade norms, a reshaping of energy markets, and an accelerating drift toward regional self-determination. For both Washington and Riyadh, this is no ceremonial engagement — it is a decisive opportunity to reconfigure the bilateral economic compact for a multipolar, tech-driven world.
For decades, US-Saudi ties rested on a transactional foundation: American security guarantees and industrial expertise in exchange for oil stability and petrodollar reinvestment. But that formula, forged within the geopolitical architecture of the 20th century, has eroded.
With oil prices hovering near the low $60s per barrel, Saudi Arabia's fiscal space is narrowing. It can no longer rely solely on hydrocarbons to finance its domestic ambitions or project geoeconomic influence abroad. In this context, Riyadh's investments in the US must be matched by a new framework of mutually beneficial incentives — including preferential access, co-innovation platforms, regulatory harmonization, and industrial localization.
In 2024, trade between the two countries totaled approximately $39 billion, spanning aerospace, health care, defense, and education. Yet trade flows alone obscure a deeper realignment.
Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, among the world's most dynamic sovereign wealth vehicles, has become a strategic actor in US capital markets — anchoring investments in artificial intelligence, electric mobility, cloud infrastructure and cinematic entertainment. This is not opportunistic capital. It is deliberate, long-term, and aligned with Riyadh's transformation under Vision 2030.
From a US vantage point, Saudi Arabia is not simply a market — it is an investment partner with regional scale and strategic reach. Giga-projects such as Neom, Red Sea Global, Diriyah Gate, and New Murabba offer American firms an unparalleled testbed to scale frontier technologies — particularly in clean energy, AI, biotech, and next-generation infrastructure — underpinned by sovereign commitment and funding certainty.
Trump's visit is thus a critical inflection point. It offers a chance to move beyond the zero-sum rhetoric of transactionalism and re-anchor the relationship in a shared strategy of co-investment and industrial policy coordination.
To attract sustained Saudi capital, the US must offer more than financial returns — it must offer access. This includes targeted investment incentives, joint innovation hubs, and Saudi participation in the development of foundational technologies, from semiconductors to quantum computing.
Giga-projects such as Neom, Red Sea Global, Diriyah Gate, and New Murabba offer American firms an unparalleled testbed to scale frontier technologies.
John Sfakianakis
A particularly promising domain for strategic alignment is the nexus between energy and data. As data centers become the physical substrate of the AI economy, demand for secure, scalable, and clean power will soar.
Here, Saudi Arabia — with its abundant land, engineering capacity, and sovereign financing — can serve as a critical partner in powering next-generation US-linked data infrastructure using small modular nuclear reactors. This is a high-stakes, high-value collaboration: the fusion of American technological leadership with Saudi scale and capital to co-develop resilient digital and energy ecosystems.
To realize this vision, institutional mechanisms are essential. The US must provide clear and stable regulatory pathways for Saudi investment in sensitive sectors, including transparent national security review procedures. Riyadh, in turn, must ensure predictable legal and commercial frameworks that protect foreign investors and enable effective dispute resolution.
A next-generation alliance should be underpinned by joint ventures, dual IPO listings, technology transfer frameworks and mutual recognition standards across digital and industrial domains.
This visit, then, is not a diplomatic overture — it is a geopolitical stress test. Can the Saudi-US relationship evolve beyond its traditional oil-for-security model into a 21st-century partnership built on innovation, industrial resilience and geoeconomic alignment? Or will it remain tethered to a geopolitical script that no longer reflects global realities?
If successful, Trump's visit could mark the beginning of a more mature, adaptive, and future-facing US-Saudi alliance — one that sets a precedent for how advanced and emerging powers can jointly navigate the complexities of a fragmenting global order.