Leading American executives join Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and President Donald Trump at Washington event to accelerate deals in AI, energy and defense
More than a few of America’s top business figures gathered at the John F. Kennedy Center in Washington for a U.S.–Saudi Investment Forum that framed Saudi Arabia as a premier destination for high-stakes corporate engagement.
The event came as Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman met President
Donald Trump, underscoring a shift from past secrecy to open pageantry in the U.S.–Saudi commercial relationship.
Executives including Nvidia’s Jensen Huang, Salesforce’s Marc Benioff and Palantir’s Alex Karp were present at the red-carpet forum, signaling that the kingdom’s deep wealth and strategic ambitions are now matching the scale of deal-making appetite in the United States.
According to sources, the forum emphasised how Saudi Arabia needs advanced technology and the United States needs new outlets for innovation and investment.
Discussions spanned artificial intelligence infrastructure, energy links and defence cooperation.
Saudi investment pledges to the U.S. have now approached the one-trillion-dollar threshold following an earlier commitment of six-hundred billion dollars.
For U.S. firms, the appeal lies in access to cheap power, large land-parcels and a government willing to move quickly on transactions—a proposition voiced succinctly by one chief technology officer who described two-day deal cycles as “real quick, very fast.”
The event also sought to reset Washington’s optics vis-à-vis Riyadh: following the 2018 killing of journalist
Jamal Khashoggi and the diplomatic backlash that followed, the new forum marked a more open embrace of Saudi Arabia by U.S. business and political elites.
Mr Trump’s comments during the event reflected this shift, emphasising renewed U.S.–Saudi alignment in innovation and investment.
While large letters of intent were signed, observers caution that execution will determine success: many of the announced deals still face regulatory reviews, technology export rules and infrastructure build-outs.
Nevertheless, the forum represents a symbolic turning point—Saudi Arabia is now openly courting U.S. corporate power and U.S. industry is visibly responding.
With energy, artificial-intelligence compute and defence all tied into the forum’s agenda, the U.S.–Saudi business corridor appears to be entering a new phase characterised by rapid deal-making and strategic alignment.