Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman kicked off a visit to Cairo on Tuesday, 15 October—his first to the Egyptian capital in over two years—where he met with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.
The two leaders agreed on a wide range of regional issues— particularly the wars in Gaza and Lebanon— and reiterated the need for establishing an independent and sovereign Palestinian state and ending the ongoing hostilities between Hamas and Israel. For his part, el-Sisi has made repeated calls for an independent Palestinian state in the past months, while last month, Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan announced the formation of the Global Alliance for the Implementation of the Two-State Solution.
However, the feasibility of a Palestinian state looks bleak amid the mushrooming Israeli settlement presence swallowing up large swaths of the occupied West Bank and Israel's war on Gaza, leaving the 360 square kilometre coastal territory in near-complete ruin.
Internal Palestinian divisions also slow down the realisation of a Palestinian state. Earlier this month, Cairo convened a meeting of Palestinian factions in an attempt to find a way out of the current crisis in Gaza and the West Bank and to come up with a unified vision for 'the day after' in Gaza.
Palestinian unity would be essential to any negotiations to push for a Palestinian state as Israel not only drags its feet but is actively trying to bury any hope for statehood once and for all. By making Gaza unfit for living and life more difficult in the West Bank, Israel is hoping Palestinians will leave their lands and be absorbed into neighbouring countries (Egypt and Jordan, among others).
Meanwhile, Israel has expanded its war aims beyond Gaza and toward eliminating all threats against it, including groups like Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen, who are attacking international shipping in the Red Sea to make Israel and its Western backers pay a price for the ongoing war on Gaza.