The divide that exists on this issue won't matter six months from now once the PIF and PGA Enterpriises iron out their differences and Yassir gets a seat on the board. This isn't about sportswashing anymore and never really was. All Yassir and the Saudi PIF have ever wanted was to be legitimized in the world of professional men's golf. Unfortunately, to get there he/they had to start a rogue league and pay un-Godly sums of money to purge some of the PGAT's best players in order for LIV Golf to be taken as a serious entity and threat to the PGAT.
Problem is the PIF's been bleeding money from the get go on LIV and they want out. They're smart investors and are not about to continue throwing good money after bad. All they want is to be an equal investment partner in PGA Tour Enterprises, similar to SSG. They'll get there, eventually, but the sticking points have been how best to re-integrate the best players that left back to the PGAT and how those with non-expired LIV contracts will be compensated. Not all players that left will be welcome back. Many will have play on lesser tours and work their way back. LIV, as we currently know it, won't exist in its current form. There will be a team golf component within the PGAT structure, but it won't look anything remotely like LIV.
The war is over and the PGAT won. Now it's just a matter of sorting out the messy details in order to reunite the game. That said, I don't see LIV Golf surviving past this year, unless something drastic were to happen, such as inking a major US network TV deal. Golf fans have spoken and the majority do not want 54-hole, no cut, shotgun start, nightclub music blaring, team golf. It's fairly obivious even to the untrained eye.