Kinetic escalation in the Persian Gulf is straining the U.S.-GCC economic partnership, as Iranian attacks on infrastructure destabilize trillion-dollar global investment strategies.
Browsing: UAE
U.S. military recklessness in the Persian Gulf threatens global energy flows, dismantling the international legitimacy of American primacy and empowering rival stabilizers.
Iran threatens over a dozen U.S. companies—including Apple, Microsoft, and Nvidia—with kinetic and cyber strikes, citing their role in supporting “terrorist” military operations.
AbuDhabi pushes for a multinational military intervention to reclaim strategic Gulf islands,signaling a definitive shift toward direct confrontation with Tehran
“The Iran war has proven that neither the Abraham Accords nor U.S. bases can shield the Gulf; it has replaced the old policy of reliance with a vacuum of fear.”
Lack of strategic planning and mounting military costs force the U.S. toward risky ground escalations against a defiant Iran.
Iranian strikes have devastated the UAE’s globalized economy, causing massive market losses, flight cancellations, and a property sector collapse.
War tests economic resilience as UAE maintains connectivity, determining which regional partnerships survive post-conflict.
After the UAE’s withdrawal, Saudi Arabia is restructuring Yemen’s anti-Houthi forces, integrating former Emirati-backed groups under its command.
Somaliland deepened ties with the UAE and secured historic recognition from Israel, bolstering its economy but enraging Somalia.
