Just as the outlines of a potential agreement between the United States and Iran were beginning to take shape, President Trump added a significant new dimension to the conversation. In a social media post on Monday, he indicated that any deal with Iran should come packaged with a broader regional commitment, specifically a requirement that several additional countries formally join the Abraham Accords, the landmark diplomatic agreements brokered during his first term that normalized relations between Israel and several Arab nations.
Trump described negotiations with Iran as proceeding well but made clear that he sees the Iran agreement and expanded Abraham Accords membership as linked. In his telling, the enormous effort the United States has invested in pulling together what he called a very complex puzzle should yield not just a ceasefire but a wholesale shift in how the broader Middle East engages with Israel diplomatically.
Which countries Trump has in mind
The list Trump put forward is substantial. He called on Saudi Arabia and Qatar to sign on immediately, followed by Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt and Jordan. The request is notable for its ambition. Saudi Arabia has long been considered the most consequential potential addition to the Abraham Accords, with its participation viewed as a potential turning point for regional stability and Israeli legitimacy across the Arab world. Getting Riyadh to the table has eluded previous administrations and remains one of the most complicated diplomatic challenges in the region.
Egypt and Jordan present a different situation. Both countries already maintain formal diplomatic relations with Israel under longstanding peace treaties, making their addition to the accords more of a symbolic upgrade than a fundamental shift. Trump appeared to acknowledge some flexibility in his demands, suggesting he might accept one or two countries declining to sign while still expecting most to comply.
He also floated the possibility that Iran itself could eventually join the accords if a broader agreement is reached, a suggestion that would represent one of the most dramatic diplomatic reversals in the modern history of the Middle East.
What the Abraham Accords are
The Abraham Accords were established during Trump’s first term as a series of diplomatic, economic and security agreements designed to normalize relations between Israel and Arab nations that had previously refused to formally recognize the Israeli state. The United Arab Emirates and Bahrain were the first to sign in 2020, followed by Sudan and Morocco. Kazakhstan joined more recently, extending the accords beyond the immediate Middle East region.
The agreements were framed as a foundation for broader cooperation across the region and were seen by the Trump administration as a step toward eventual full normalization between Israel and its Arab neighbors. Trump has consistently pointed to the accords as one of the defining achievements of his first term and has made their expansion a clear priority in his second.
Why the timing matters
Adding the Abraham Accords condition to an already intricate Iran negotiation raises obvious questions about feasibility. The talks with Tehran are already complicated by disagreements over nuclear enrichment, frozen assets, sanctions relief and control of the Strait of Hormuz. Layering a demand for regional diplomatic realignment on top of those unresolved issues introduces new variables that could slow the process considerably or give either side additional reasons to walk away.
At the same time, Trump has shown throughout his political career a preference for large, sweeping frameworks over narrower transactional agreements. The approach carries risk but also the potential for outcomes that more cautious diplomacy might never attempt.
The road ahead
It remains unclear how the Abraham Accords condition will be received by the countries named or how it will be integrated into the formal negotiating process with Iran. Trump said he raised the idea with regional leaders during discussions over the weekend, suggesting the concept has already been introduced to at least some of the relevant parties.
Whether Saudi Arabia, Turkey or Pakistan see joining the accords as an acceptable price for a broader regional settlement is a question that will shape the next phase of diplomacy significantly. Trump appears to believe the answer is yes. The region, as always, will have the final word.

