The Gulf monarchies traded political capital for U.S. security and normalization with Israel. Now, they face missiles, drones, and economic instability. Discover the brutal truth behind the Middle East's failing security deals.
For decades, the math seemed simple for the Gulf monarchies. If you want to keep your skyscrapers gleaming and your oil flowing, you make a deal with the biggest power on the block. You host the U.S. bases. You sign the normalization deals. You trade political capital for a "security umbrella" that promises to keep the neighborhood bullies at bay.
But right now, looking at the smoke on the horizon, that math isn't adding up.
The ongoing tension between Iran and its rivals has exposed a brutal truth that nobody in the plush offices of Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, or Doha wanted to face: The very things they did to buy security are now making them targets. They didn't start this war, but they are the ones currently paying the highest price.


