Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
1MAR

UAE and Saudi Arabia weigh Iran strikes

3 min read
15:00UTC

Axios reports the UAE and Saudi Arabia are considering direct attacks on Iranian missile sites — a step no Gulf Arab state has taken in the modern era, and one that would cost Riyadh a Chinese-brokered peace deal barely two years old.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The report's sourcing — Israeli officials rather than Emirati or Saudi ones — suggests this may serve Israeli information interests in widening the coalition as much as it reflects genuine Gulf deliberation.

Axios reported Wednesday, citing Israeli officials, that the UAE and Saudi Arabia are considering direct strikes on Iranian missile launch sites, driven by the volume of fire both countries have absorbed. Neither government has confirmed. The UAE has intercepted 165 ballistic missiles, 2 cruise missiles, and 541 drones since operations began . Saudi air defences downed eight drones near Riyadh during the same attack wave that struck the US Embassy compound .

The source warrants scrutiny. Israeli officials have a direct interest in Gulf States joining the campaign — broader participation distributes both the military burden and the political exposure. A report sourced to Israeli officials, published without confirmation from Riyadh or Abu Dhabi, may reflect an Israeli aspiration as much as a Gulf intention. The incentive to leak such a report is obvious: it pressures Gulf capitals publicly and creates a diplomatic expectation they must either meet or visibly refuse.

For Saudi Arabia, the calculus runs through Beijing. The 2023 China-brokered normalisation agreement with Iran ended seven years of severed relations, reopened embassies, and gave China a diplomatic stake in Gulf stability it had never previously held. Saudi strikes on Iranian territory would collapse that architecture entirely. Beijing has already moved beyond general calls for restraint to direct negotiations with Tehran pressing Iran to spare specific Gulf infrastructure . Chinese diplomatic credibility is invested in a framework that Saudi bombs would destroy.

No Gulf Arab state has struck Iranian territory in the modern era. During the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s, Gulf monarchies funded Baghdad's war effort and allowed Iraqi aircraft to operate from their bases, but never launched their own attacks on Iran. Both the UAE and Saudi Arabia have framed every action in this conflict as purely defensive — intercepting incoming fire, protecting their own populations. Strikes on launch sites inside Iran would end that framing permanently, converting two non-belligerents into active combatants in a war neither chose to start.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

According to a single report citing Israeli sources, Saudi Arabia and the UAE are reportedly considering launching their own airstrikes against Iranian missile sites. Neither country has confirmed this. Both have so far absorbed Iranian missile attacks without striking Iran directly. Joining the fight would be a major escalation — particularly for Saudi Arabia, which signed a peace deal with Iran just three years ago brokered by China. If they do strike, Iran could respond by targeting Saudi oil facilities, which would affect global energy prices significantly.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

China faces a direct test of its regional diplomatic credibility that the body does not surface: the 2023 deal was Beijing's most significant Middle East diplomatic achievement. Saudi strikes on Iran would demonstrate that Chinese soft power in the Gulf is insufficient to prevent an agreement signatory from attacking the other party — revealing whether Chinese regional influence is structural or merely transactional, with consequences for Beijing's global mediator positioning.

Root Causes

The 2023 Saudi-Iran normalisation was always a strategic hedge rather than genuine rapprochement — Riyadh was simultaneously balancing US pressure for Gulf-Israel normalisation and Chinese incentives for Iran engagement. Iran's sustained ballistic missile campaign against Saudi territory has now collapsed that balance, forcing a choice the 2023 agreement was specifically designed to defer indefinitely.

Escalation

UAE's structural position differs from Saudi Arabia's in ways the body does not address: no China-brokered normalisation agreement at risk, an existing intelligence-sharing architecture with Israel via post-Abraham Accords security cooperation, and a smaller domestic political exposure to Sunni-Shia framing. UAE acting before or independently of Saudi Arabia is structurally more plausible than joint simultaneous action.

What could happen next?
2 risk1 consequence1 meaning1 precedent
  • Risk

    Iranian retaliation against Saudi oil infrastructure following Gulf state strikes could remove 6-10% of global crude supply, driving oil prices to levels not seen since 2008 and compounding existing shipping insurance paralysis.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Consequence

    Saudi participation would dissolve the distinction between the US-Israeli coalition and the broader Gulf, transforming a bilateral conflict into a regional war with no neutral Gulf mediators remaining.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    China's credibility as a regional mediator is directly at stake — Saudi strikes on Iran would represent the most significant failure of Chinese Middle East diplomacy since Beijing's regional engagement began in earnest.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Meaning

    Israeli sourcing of the report suggests a deliberate signal to Tehran that Gulf participation is possible — functioning as a deterrence escalation tool whether or not Gulf action is genuinely imminent.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Precedent

    Gulf state strikes on Iran would establish that the Abraham Accords framework has produced effective military coalition behaviour even without formal Saudi-Israel normalisation.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #19 · First US torpedo kill since 1945

Axios· 4 Mar 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
UAE and Saudi Arabia weigh Iran strikes
Direct Gulf Arab military strikes on Iranian territory would dissolve the distinction both states have maintained between defending their own airspace and joining the US-Israeli offensive campaign. For Saudi Arabia, it would also jeopardise the 2023 China-brokered normalisation with Iran — Beijing's most consequential Middle Eastern diplomatic achievement — at the moment China has shifted from general restraint calls to direct pressure on Tehran.
Different Perspectives
IAEA
IAEA
Director General Rafael Grossi appeared in person at the UNSC on 19 May and warned that a direct hit on an operating reactor 'could result in very high release of radioactivity'. The session produced a condemnation record but no resolution, and the Barakah perimeter was already struck on 17 May.
Hengaw (Kurdish rights monitor)
Hengaw (Kurdish rights monitor)
Hengaw documented three judicial executions and the detention of Kurdish writer Majid Karimi in Tehran on 19 May, establishing Khorasan Razavi province as the newest geography in Iran's wartime judicial record. The organisation's Norway-based operation continues to surface a domestic repression track running in parallel with every diplomatic and military development.
India
India
Six India-flagged vessels conducted a coordinated cluster transit under PGSA bilateral assurances during the 17 May window, paying no yuan tolls. New Delhi's inclusion in Iran's state-to-state passage track insulates Indian energy supply without requiring endorsement of the PGSA's yuan-toll architecture or alignment with the US coalition.
Pakistan
Pakistan
Pakistan is the only functioning diplomatic bridge between Tehran and Washington. Its role is relay, not mediation in the settlement sense: it conveyed Iran's 10-point counter-MOU in early May, relayed the US rejection, and is now passing 'corrective points' in the third documented exchange of this sub-cycle without either side working from a shared text.
UK and France (Northwood coalition)
UK and France (Northwood coalition)
Twenty-six coalition members have published no rules of engagement eight days after the Bahrain joint statement; Lloyd's underwriters have conditioned war-risk reopening on written ROE from either Iran or the coalition. Italian and French mine-countermeasures deployments are operating on the in-water clearance task CENTCOM Admiral Brad Cooper's 90% mine-stockpile claim does not address.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Riyadh has not publicly commented on the Barakah strike or the 50-47 discharge vote. Saudi output feeds the IEA's $106 base case; the $5 Brent premium above that model reflects institutional uncertainty no Gulf producer can compress through supply adjustment alone.