Saudi Arabia and the UAE join the U.S. forces to strike the regional rival Iran and its proxies.

Gulf monarchies shift from defensive posture to operational support for U.S.–Israeli strikes as missile attacks on energy hubs push Riyadh and Abu Dhabi closer to direct military involvement against Iran. Iran is imploding, the regime is broke, and their war machine is running on empty.

The Gulf Countries, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, were hosting a range of US operations while politically pretending to be neutral. As US President Donald Trump is claiming that a ceasefire has been agreed with the Iranian leadership and Iran is repeatedly denying the ceasefire, reports are suggesting that the Gulf monarchies are edging towards participating in the conflict.

According to reports from the Wall Street Journal, Saudi Arabia has opened up its King Fahad air base, a supposed shift from its position of not letting US forces use its airspace and infrastructure against Iran. The position was struck by a US strike on Saudi Arabia’s energy infrastructure.

Saudi Arabia expelled the Iranian military attaché and embassy staff on March 21, 2026. The WSJ reported that a source suggested that Saudi Prince Mohammed bin Salman is weighing military options to join the war.

Simultaneously, the UAE has suggested that it has closed the Iranian institutions, such as the Iranian Hospital and the Iranian Club, and rendered the hospital’s phone lines, WhatsApp channel, and website.

UAE strikes on Bandar Abbas port

UAE-made kamikaze drones struck Iran’s Bandar Abbas port, marking a significant escalation in the ongoing conflict between the UAE and Iran. This attack is part of a series of covert operations by the UAE against Iranian targets.

Reports in the 15:00–15:05 UTC window indicate that Iran’s port of Bandar Abbas was struck by UAE‑made Yabhon loitering munitions, with several sources stating the United Arab Emirates is behind a series of covert attacks on Iranian territory. One feed specifies that the strikes occurred “yesterday,” suggesting an attack within the last 24 hours that is only now being surfaced in open sources. Earlier alerts have already flagged Bandar Abbas as a target of US‑made LUCAS drones; today’s reporting adds an explicit Emirati origin for part of the strike package.

Bandar Abbas is Iran’s primary naval and commercial port on the Strait of Hormuz, a choke point for roughly a fifth of globally traded crude and significant LNG volumes. The reports describe “Yabhon kamikaze drones” hitting port facilities. There is no immediate visual confirmation of damage or disruption to berths, cranes, or fuel handling infrastructure, and Tehran and Abu Dhabi have not issued formal statements. However, the repeated mention of UAE‑origin munitions and prior covert strikes, combined with concurrent Iranian claims of US projectiles near Qeshm Island, point to a widening, multi-actor campaign inside Iran’s Gulf littoral.

Saudi Arabia joins the US forces

The prospect of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates moving closer to direct involvement in the 2026 Iran War is reshaping the strategic balance in the Gulf as reports by the Wall Street Journal indicate that both monarchies have begun enabling operational support for the ongoing U.S.–Israeli offensive against Iranian military infrastructure.

Statements attributed to Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan warning that “Saudi Arabia’s patience with Iranian attacks is not unlimited” and signals from Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman about restoring deterrence are being interpreted by defence analysts as evidence that Gulf force posture is shifting from defensive containment toward potential offensive participation.

According to reporting citing officials familiar with the situation, the decision by Riyadh to allow U.S. forces access to King Fahd Air Base after initially prohibiting the use of Saudi territory for strikes on Iran is viewed as a critical escalation indicator because basing access directly expands the operational radius of U.S. airpower across the Persian Gulf theatre.

Saudi Arabia opens strategic bases to the U.S. forces.

Yemen’s Houthi movement fired missiles at Saudi Arabia after accusing the kingdom of bombing an airport under their control on Monday, breaking a four-year truce in the conflict between the kingdom and the Iran-aligned group.

Saudi Arabia’s reported approval for U.S. military access to King Fahd Air Base represents a structural change in Gulf war posture because the base provides a forward operating platform capable of supporting strike aircraft, aerial refuelling operations, and intelligence missions directed toward Iranian targets.

The reversal of the kingdom’s earlier pre-war policy restricting the use of its airspace and bases for attacks on Iran suggests that Saudi leadership now assesses the threat environment as severe enough to justify deeper integration into U.S. operational planning.

Officials cited in the report described Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman as eager to re-establish deterrence against Iran, indicating that Saudi strategic thinking has shifted from diplomatic de-escalation toward a posture built around restoring credibility through visible military alignment.

One source reportedly told investigators that it is only a matter of time before Saudi Arabia enters the war directly, a statement that defence planners interpret as signalling that contingency planning for offensive participation is already underway inside the kingdom’s military command structure.

Saudi air defence activity in recent days, including interceptions of Iranian missiles and drones aimed toward Riyadh and eastern provinces, reinforces the perception that the kingdom is already operating within a wartime defensive framework even without formally declaring entry into combat operations.

Missile and drone strikes attributed to Iran also damaged U.S. aerial refuelling aircraft at Prince Sultan Air Base, highlighting the vulnerability of regional logistics hubs and demonstrating that Iranian retaliation is targeting the infrastructure that enables coalition air operations.

The continued targeting of Gulf territory by Iranian missiles has altered Saudi threat calculations by transforming the conflict from a distant confrontation into a direct challenge to national security and economic stability.

Energy infrastructure, civilian areas, and transport routes have been repeatedly exposed to attack, increasing pressure on Riyadh to adopt a more assertive stance to prevent Iran from establishing long-term leverage over Gulf trade routes and oil exports.

Analysts describe the situation as a deterrence credibility crisis in which failing to respond decisively could encourage further strikes and undermine confidence in Gulf defence systems that have relied heavily on U.S. support.

The decision to grant basing access therefore carries significance beyond tactical cooperation because it signals that Saudi Arabia may be preparing for a transition from defensive interception to participation in coordinated strike operations if escalation continues.

UAE sanctions Iranian offshore transactions through Emirati banks

The United Arab Emirates has taken separate but parallel steps that defence observers view as part of a broader Gulf alignment with U.S. and Israeli war objectives against Iran.

Authorities in Dubai confirmed the shutdown of the Iranian Hospital and the Iranian Club, facilities described as being linked to the Iranian regime and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, citing violations of national law and misuse of the institutions for political purposes.

The closure of these facilities is interpreted as a security measure designed to restrict Iranian influence networks inside the UAE while signalling that Abu Dhabi is willing to apply pressure beyond purely military channels.

Officials are also reported to be considering freezing billions of dollars in Iranian assets held within the Emirates, a move that could significantly limit Tehran’s access to foreign currency, trade financing, and financial networks used to support military operations.

Financial restrictions of that scale would represent one of the most consequential economic actions taken by a Gulf state since the start of the conflict because Iranian overseas holdings play a critical role in sustaining its war economy.

Sources cited in the report indicated that Emirati leaders are debating whether to commit military forces directly while simultaneously lobbying the United States against any ceasefire that would leave Iran’s military capabilities intact.

Such lobbying reflects a strategic calculation that partial de-escalation without dismantling Iran’s strike capability would leave Gulf states exposed to continued missile and drone attacks.

The UAE’s approach therefore combines internal security tightening, financial pressure, and diplomatic engagement with Washington in an effort to shape the outcome of the war in a direction that reduces long-term Iranian threat potential.

Defence analysts note that these measures collectively indicate that the Emirates are moving away from the cautious neutrality seen in previous regional crises.

The shift suggests that Gulf leadership increasingly views the current conflict as a decisive moment that could determine the balance of power in the Middle East for years to come.

As a result, analysts describe the current escalation as being driven not only by military considerations but also by financial and political pressures that make continued neutrality increasingly difficult to sustain.

This combination of security threats and economic exposure is widely seen as the primary reason Gulf states are now reconsidering their earlier policy of avoiding direct participation in the war.

Regional Basing, Missile Launches, and Operational Support Expand War Footprint

Reports that ground-based missile launches against Iran have originated from Bahrain illustrate how the conflict footprint is expanding across multiple Gulf states even without formal declarations of war.

Bahrain hosts key U.S. military facilities, and any launch activity from its territory indicates a deeper level of operational integration between regional forces and U.S. command structures.

The use of Gulf bases for refuelling, intelligence gathering, and air defence coordination is increasing the logistical depth available to coalition forces conducting operations against Iran.

Access to additional airfields reduces response time for strike aircraft and enables sustained sortie generation, a factor that can significantly affect the tempo of air campaigns.

Defence analysts emphasise that logistics infrastructure such as refuelling aircraft, radar coverage, and forward bases often determines the outcome of regional conflicts more than the number of combat aircraft alone.

Iran’s attacks on Prince Sultan Air Base, which damaged U.S. refuelling planes, demonstrate that Tehran is aware of the importance of these logistical nodes and is attempting to disrupt them.

Targeting support infrastructure rather than front-line forces is a strategy designed to slow coalition operations while avoiding immediate escalation to full-scale confrontation.

The expansion of operational activity across several Gulf countries increases the risk that local incidents could trigger broader involvement by states that initially intended to remain outside the fighting.

Military planners describe this dynamic as escalation by proximity, where the use of shared bases and airspace gradually draws additional actors into the conflict even without formal policy decisions.

The growing reliance on regional facilities therefore represents both a tactical advantage for coalition forces and a strategic risk of widening the war.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE were dragged into the conflict

Analysts quoted in the report describe Saudi Arabia and the UAE as being in a structural bind in which they fear being drawn into a wider war but also believe that failing to act could invite further Iranian attacks.

Recent years of diplomatic engagement with Tehran, including détente efforts, had been intended to reduce the likelihood of direct confrontation, but repeated strikes on Gulf territory have weakened confidence in that approach.

The current shift toward closer cooperation with the United States reflects a reassessment of the effectiveness of diplomacy in preventing Iranian military pressure.

Gulf leaders are reportedly urging Washington to continue operations until Iran’s offensive capabilities are significantly reduced, a position that suggests they see the conflict as an opportunity to reshape the regional balance.

At the same time, the absence of official confirmation from Saudi or Emirati governments regarding direct participation indicates that both states remain cautious about the political and military risks of entering the war openly.

The United States has declined to comment on the extent of Gulf involvement, reinforcing the uncertainty surrounding how far regional cooperation has progressed.

Oil prices rising in response to the reports demonstrate how financial markets interpret even limited steps toward escalation as a signal of potential supply disruption.

The economic impact of the conflict therefore feeds back into political decision-making, increasing pressure on Gulf governments to ensure that Iran cannot threaten shipping routes or energy production indefinitely.

As of March 24, 2026, the actions taken by Saudi Arabia and the UAE remain classified as supportive measures rather than full combat entry, but the trajectory suggests that further escalation cannot be ruled out.

The evolving situation illustrates how regional conflicts can expand through incremental decisions on basing access, financial pressure, and defensive operations until the distinction between support and participation becomes increasingly difficult to maintain.

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