Trump, the Ulema, Iranian intervention, & the Abraham Accords
bin Salman's reform movement, "Saudi Vision 2030", requires disruptions to a society at odds with the Saudi ulema's aspirations and traditional Saudi culture - surely, traditional Saudi's aren't thrilled about professional wrestling and other plebian diversions becoming mainstream and influencing the youth.
Furthermore, the slaughter in Gaza and Saudi's perceived inaction on behalf of fellow Muslims only furthers the ulema's alienation with "Saudi Vision 2030".
Thus, when facing the age-old question of, "How does the Saud family reconcile its pragmatism with its own ulema?", an opportunity emerges:
Iranian Regime Change
Regime Change Iran to Reach Abraham Accords for Saudi
To be clear, a regime-change, today, in Saudi Arabia would prove financially cataclysmic for the United States and would actually trigger mass-mobilization and war - without Saudi Arabia helping subsidize America's wounded capital markets(e.g. real estate) and government bonds, the United States would either face a decade of stringent austerity or find itself compelled to wage war to "coerce" the old regime to return or an entirely new set of capital providers to feed at the American debt trough.
Today, the Trump administration, Netanyahu, and bin Salman all have a common winning objective: regime change in Iran. Should Iran fall, the Saudi ulema regains critical primacy in the war with militant Shias, in particular and most acutely, within Yemen. Thus, the Saudi ulema can regain complete sway over the entire peninsula, with Iranian proxies starved for support and isolated.
To give perspective, for the ulema, the Arabian Peninsula is "their world": to sweep it from Iranian infiltration would prove enough inducement to not only rubber-stamp wrestling matches in Riyadh but even, with reasonable terms, recognition of Israel.
Only A Greater Saudi Arabia Can Sign the Abraham Accords
After neutralizing Iran, bin Salman moves to annex the neighboring portion of Yemen, expanding the Kingdom, officially, and thus earning the nationalist mandate to, as a matter of "international politics", "come to an understanding with Israel".
There is a formula for Saudi Arabia to recognize Israel. The first step, though, is knocking-out the Iranian regime, and after that, annexation of a respectable chunk of Yemen. These terms provide sufficient cover for bin Salman to recognize Israel.