UAE chooses to deepen ties with Israel amid war with Iran, risking rift with Saudis
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — After facing barrages of Iranian missiles that threatened its economic future, the UAE has moved closer to Israel, widening a split with ally-turned-rival Saudi Arabia and placing it in defiant opposition to Tehran.
This gamble granted the UAE, a tourism hub where 90 percent of the population is foreign, access to Israeli air defense systems to help fend off more than 2,800 drones and missiles — effectively placing protection above all else to preserve a model based on stability, analysts said.
But its closer cooperation with Israel risks further antagonizing Iran, which the UAE views as its biggest threat, and puts Abu Dhabi at even greater odds with Saudi Arabia, which, along with much of the Gulf, has come to see Israel as the region’s main rogue actor.
“The UAE is thinking about the future and sees Israel as the best security partner that can provide cover for its economic recovery,” said Sanam Vakil, director of the Middle East and North Africa Programme at Chatham House.
Their bet appears to have paid off in terms of security and defense.
On Tuesday, US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee confirmed Israel had sent its Iron Dome air defense batteries and personnel to the UAE during the war.
The UAE became the first Gulf country, alongside Bahrain, to recognize Israel in 2020 under the US-mediated Abraham Accords.
Throughout the war, Emirati officials have lambasted unnamed Arab countries for showcasing hollow solidarity as attacks rained.
“There wasn’t enough of a sense of urgency, while this is the most existential threat that we have dealt with since the inception of the country,” said Nadim Koteich, a Lebanese-Emirati media executive and policy adviser close to the UAE government.
“But in this war, the........
