Regional Realignment Pressures Gulf Diplomacy as Saudi Arabia Reassesses Israeli–Emirati Alignment
Amid shifting Middle East alliances, Saudi Arabia faces strategic tension over the expanding cooperation between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, raising questions about regional influence, normalization, and security architecture
The evolving structure of Middle Eastern diplomacy is being shaped by a systemic realignment in which normalization between Israel and several Arab states, particularly the United Arab Emirates, has introduced new strategic alignments that are reshaping traditional Gulf power balances.
At the center of this shift is the expanding cooperation between Israel and the UAE following the establishment of formal relations under the Abraham Accords in 2020. Since then, bilateral ties have broadened across defense coordination, technology investment, trade, and intelligence cooperation.
This relationship has increasingly been viewed by regional observers as a durable strategic axis rather than a limited diplomatic opening.
Saudi Arabia, historically the region’s dominant Arab power and long-time custodian of pan-Arab diplomatic consensus, has taken a more cautious position.
While Riyadh has allowed limited indirect engagement with Israel in areas such as security coordination and intelligence deconfliction, it has not formally normalized relations.
Its approach remains tied to broader political conditions, including the unresolved Israeli–Palestinian conflict and internal regional stability considerations.
The emerging strategic concern is not merely diplomatic symbolism but the redistribution of regional influence.
Israel’s integration into Gulf security and economic networks via the UAE has created new channels of cooperation that bypass traditional Arab consensus frameworks.
This shift affects how military technology is shared, how energy and infrastructure projects are coordinated, and how regional security priorities are defined.
For Saudi Arabia, the key issue is maintaining strategic primacy in the Gulf while managing a more fragmented diplomatic environment.
The UAE’s independent foreign policy trajectory has allowed it to pursue deep ties with Israel without waiting for broader Arab alignment.
This has introduced asymmetry within the Gulf Cooperation Council, where member states increasingly pursue divergent external partnerships.
The United States has historically played a central role in facilitating and encouraging these normalization processes, viewing them as part of a broader regional security architecture aligned with counterbalancing Iranian influence.
However, the diversification of alliances has also created overlapping and sometimes competing security arrangements, particularly as Gulf states expand their bilateral partnerships with multiple external powers simultaneously.
Iran remains a structural factor shaping these dynamics.
Shared concern over Iranian regional influence has been one of the drivers of discreet cooperation between Israel and several Arab states, including those that have not formally normalized relations.
This shared threat perception has reduced barriers to engagement but has not eliminated deeper political disagreements within the Arab world over the pace and scope of normalization.
The idea that Saudi Arabia and its allies must “curb” the Israeli–Emirati axis reflects a broader strategic debate within the region over whether emerging bilateral alliances will fragment Arab collective influence or simply modernize regional diplomacy.
In practice, the outcome depends on whether Gulf states converge on shared security frameworks or continue to operate through parallel, partially overlapping partnerships.
What is structurally clear is that the Middle East is moving away from a single cohesive Arab diplomatic bloc toward a multi-layered system of bilateral and mini-lateral alignments.
The Israeli–Emirati partnership has become one of the most developed of these configurations, and its continued expansion is reshaping how regional power is distributed and exercised.