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MilitaryDec 30
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From Alliance to Confrontation: How Yemen Became an Open Arena for Saudi–Emirati Conflict

From Alliance to Confrontation: How Yemen Became an Open Arena for Saudi–Emirati Conflict

The war on Yemen is no longer merely an externally imposed military campaign led by Saudi Arabia. Over time, it has evolved into a revealing laboratory of intra-Gulf contradictions, exposing the structural fragility of alliances built on coercion, rentier power, and external patronage. The recent crisis between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi—brought into sharp relief by the Saudi targeting of a vessel allegedly carrying weapons in Yemeni waters and its classification as a “security threat”—signals not an isolated incident, but a deeper strategic rupture within the coalition that launched the war.

What was once marketed as a unified “Arab coalition” has unraveled into a competition over spoils, influence, and post-war positioning, with Yemen reduced to contested terrain rather than recognized as a sovereign political entity.

I. How the Alliance Was Formed—and Why It Collapsed

When the war on Yemen began in 2015, Saudi–Emirati coordination appeared firm, backed by full American and Western political cover. The intervention was framed through familiar rhetoric: restoring “legitimacy,” countering Iranian influence, and safeguarding Arab security. Yet this narrative concealed the absence of a shared strategic vision.

Saudi Arabia entered the war driven primarily by border security anxieties and regime survival logic. Its objective was to impose a weakened, compliant Yemeni authority incapable of exercising independent sovereignty. The UAE, by contrast, approached Yemen as a long-term geopolitical investment—a gateway to ports, islands, maritime routes, and influence extending from the Red Sea to the Horn of Africa.

What initially appeared as coordination soon gave way to latent rivalry, then to indirect confrontation. The current crisis merely brings into the open what had long been evident beneath the surface.

II. Yemen: Not a Civil War, but a Contested Prize

The Saudi attack on the alleged arms ship cannot be understood as a routine security measure. It is, rather, a symptom of collapsing trust between former partners. Riyadh’s framing of the shipment as a threat implicitly acknowledges that control over weapons, territory, and proxies inside Yemen has slipped beyond Saudi command.

The UAE’s sustained backing of local militias—particularly separatist forces in southern Yemen—has actively contributed to state fragmentation. Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, remains trapped in a war of attrition, unable to claim victory yet unwilling to withdraw. Yemen, in this calculus, is neither a nation nor a people, but a divisible geopolitical asset.

III. Competing Regional Projects: Borders versus Ports

At the heart of the Saudi–Emirati rift lies a clash between two distinct regional strategies: • Saudi Arabia seeks a centralized but weak Yemeni state, functioning as a security buffer along its southern border. • The UAE favors a decentralized Yemen, dominated through ports, islands, commercial corridors, and loyal militias—particularly in Aden, Socotra, and along the Bab al-Mandab Strait.

Southern Yemen has thus become a focal point of this rivalry, stripping the coalition discourse of any remaining credibility.

IV. Washington and Tel Aviv: Managing Disorder, Not Resolving It

The United States has historically viewed intra-Gulf tensions not as liabilities, but as tools of control. Under Donald Trump’s administration—defined by transactional diplomacy and arms-deal politics—Washington showed little interest in resolving structural conflicts. Its priority was preventing escalation only insofar as it threatened energy markets or Israeli security.

Israel, meanwhile, emerges as the silent beneficiary of Gulf fragmentation. Saudi–Emirati discord enhances: • Israeli leverage over Red Sea maritime security, • intelligence cooperation with Gulf states, • and Israel’s role as a pillar of the anti–Axis of Resistance architecture.

Normalization, in this context, is not peace-making—it is regional reengineering at the expense of popular sovereignty.

V. Yemen and the Axis of Resistance: Strategic Reversal

Ironically, fractures within the aggressor camp have strengthened Yemen’s resistance forces, which—despite siege and devastation—have imposed new deterrence equations. The Saudi–Emirati split exposes: • the failure of the US-backed Gulf intervention, • the fragility of alliances grounded in opportunism, • and the limits of military superiority when confronted by organized popular resistance.

Yemen has shifted from being perceived as the weakest link to becoming a site of systemic exposure for the regional order imposed by Washington and its allies.

VI. Where Is the Crisis Headed?

The Saudi–Emirati rift is not a temporary misunderstanding. It is structural and enduring, even if temporarily managed through American mediation. As long as Yemen remains under indirect occupation, conflict among occupiers is inevitable.

Future trajectories include: • managed rivalry below open warfare, • proxy-based escalation, • or forced strategic retreat driven by battlefield realities favoring the resistance.

In all scenarios, one conclusion is unavoidable: the war on Yemen has failed, and its internal contradictions now pose a greater threat to its architects than to their adversaries.

Conclusion

What is unfolding between Saudi Arabia and the UAE marks the end of an era. The illusion of a cohesive Gulf-led regional order is dissolving, while resistance movements continue to consolidate power and legitimacy. Yemen—once targeted for submission—has become a witness to the collapse of hegemonic fantasies and a pivotal arena in the reconfiguration of regional power.