Iran's recent drone strikes on the United Arab Emirates, including an हमला on the Fujairah oil zone, highlight Tehran's continued opposition to the peace agreements between Israel and several Gulf states. Iran views the normalization deal between Israel and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain as a strategic threat and has sought to undermine it through direct and indirect attacks across the region.
Rather than weakening ties, the strikes are likely to push Abu Dhabi closer to Israel. When the normalization agreement was signed in 2020, Gulf states were already facing rising insecurity from Iranian-backed attacks in Yemen and against Saudi energy infrastructure. Israel was seen as a valuable security partner amid shifting alliances and growing missile and drone threats.
Although regional diplomacy has shifted in recent years, and some Arab states have limited public engagement with Israel due to ongoing conflicts in Gaza, Lebanon, and the West Bank, the latest Iranian attacks place the United Arab Emirates on the front line. This renewed sense of vulnerability is expected to deepen defense and strategic cooperation between Abu Dhabi and Jerusalem, even as broader regional tensions remain unresolved.




