SAUDI ARABIA

Saudi official says Israeli government needs reform, warns against ‘spoilers’ of the 20-point peace plan

December 06, 2025
Saudi Arabia’s Minister Plenipotentiary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Dr. Manal Radwan speaking at Doha Forum on Saturday.
Saudi Arabia’s Minister Plenipotentiary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Dr. Manal Radwan speaking at Doha Forum on Saturday.

Saudi Gazette report

DOHA — Saudi Arabia’s Minister Plenipotentiary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Dr. Manal Radwan, said on Saturday that meaningful peace cannot be achieved without reforming the Israeli government, warning that “spoilers” seeking to divert or redefine the U.S.-backed 20-point peace plan must be confronted.

Speaking at the Doha Forum, Dr. Radwan said Israel’s current leadership “opposes the two-state solution” and includes officials who “continuously incite against Palestinians, against Arabs, against Muslims,” adding that Saudi Arabia does not see “a partner for peace not even a partner for a sustainable ceasefire.”

She stressed that implementing the 20-point plan and the related UN Security Council resolution is, in itself, a form of needed reform.

“To really get into a sustainable peace and security… to end this conflict and implement President Trump’s 20-point peace plan, that is the reform we are hoping to see,” she said.

Global Alliance for Implementation: ‘An effort centered on action, not declarations’

Dr. Radwan clarified that the Global Alliance for the Implementation of the Two-State Solution emerged after “many diplomatic efforts,” noting that Spain had advanced important groundwork, while the initiative itself is jointly led by Norway, Saudi Arabia, and the European Union, with Saudi Arabia chairing the Arab O.

She emphasized that the alliance is defined by implementation: “Almost everyone in the international community agrees that the two-state solution is the only solution forward. If that is so, then the question becomes: What is everyone going to do to make implementation possible?”

When asked whether the alliance aligns with the 20-point plan, she said: “Yes, of course,” noting the role Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Indonesia, Pakistan and others played in shaping the initiative with the United States. She added that the plan offers “hope” because it carries the personal commitment of the U.S. President.


“Leader-driven diplomacy is the best diplomacy,” she said.

‘No redefinition, no renegotiation’: Warning against attempts to dilute the plan

Dr. Radwan said respecting the integrity of the 20-point plan is “the most crucial thing,” warning that any actor attempting to spoil or divert from it “needs to be addressed.”

“We cannot be open to redefinition and renegotiation of what we have already agreed to,” she said.


That includes the definition of a ceasefire, the meaning of disarmament, the requirement for a Palestinian-led process for governing Gaza, the principle of unifying Gaza and the West Bank, and the Palestinian right to self-determination.

“We cannot redefine these things back and forth and lose sight of the core of the conflict,” she said.

‘Gaza is not a standalone case’ the conflict must be addressed as a whole

Dr. Radwan cautioned against treating Gaza in isolation.


“Gaza is not a case on its own… It is about the Palestinian conflict,” she said.

Whether discussing security, humanitarian access, or movement from one phase to the next, she said the process cannot be separated from the “ultimate objective” security for all, regional integration, and the realization of a Palestinian state.

“If we do not ensure the security and the political aspirations of Palestinians, then there is no security for anyone including Israel and the region at large,” she said.

Avoiding the cycle of war, fatigue, and relapse

Dr. Radwan warned that the international community has “seen this movie before”.

“A war in Gaza, followed by international engagement, followed by humanitarian appeals, then political fatigue, then a more violent escalation.”

She said the only way to break this cycle is implementing a pathway that provides both security and political fulfillmentfor Palestinians.

‘Palestinian-led’ reforms and who actually needs to reform

Responding to a question on reforms, Dr. Radwan said the Palestinian Authority has been engaged in reform efforts “for the past 30 years,” and President Mahmoud Abbas has committed to a “robust reform plan.”

Saudi Arabia, she stressed, works “daily” with the PA to support those efforts.

But she added that the more urgent reform remains on the Israeli side.


“We have an Israeli government that opposes the two-state solution,” she said. “So that is the actual and important reform we are hoping to see.”


December 06, 2025
180 views
HIGHLIGHTS
SAUDI ARABIA
3 hours ago

19,790 residency, labor, and border law violators arrested in one week

SAUDI ARABIA
4 hours ago

Move to slap SR500 fine on companies if failed to disclose beneficial owner data

SAUDI ARABIA
5 hours ago

Saudi embassy in Ethiopia warns of Marburg virus outbreak