Tuesday, December 30, 2025
HomeHealthFrom Brothers to Rivals: Key Moments in Saudi-UAE Relations

From Brothers to Rivals: Key Moments in Saudi-UAE Relations

By Yousef Saba
DUBAI, Dec 30 – A Saudi airstrike on ‌what ​it said was a UAE-linked weapons ‌shipment in Yemen on Tuesday marked the most significant escalation between Riyadh ​and Abu Dhabi to date. Once the twin pillars of regional security, the two Gulf heavyweights have seen their ‍interests diverge on everything from oil ​quotas to geopolitical influence.
Here is a timeline of how the relationship has evolved:
2011: As the Arab Spring ​spreads, the ⁠two form a unified front against Islamist movements, deploying joint forces to Bahrain to quell an uprising and coordinating support for Egypt’s 2013 military overthrow of the Muslim Brotherhood government.
March, 2015: They launch a military intervention in Yemen to restore the government ousted by the Iran-aligned Houthis. UAE troops lead ground ‌operations, while Saudi air power controls the skies.
June, 2017: The allies lead a boycott of Qatar, ​accusing ‌Doha of supporting terrorism, charges ‍it denies. The ⁠move cements the alignment between Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) and UAE leader Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed (MBZ).
2019: The UAE draws down troops in Yemen, shifting strategy but retaining influence through the separatist Southern Transitional Council (STC), leaving Riyadh to shoulder the war against the Houthis.
September, 2020: The UAE normalizes ties with Israel under the U.S.-brokered Abraham Accords. Saudi Arabia, the custodian of Islam’s two holiest sites, declines to follow suit, insisting on Palestinian statehood first, ​giving Abu Dhabi a unique diplomatic channel to Washington.
January, 2021: Saudi Arabia leads the Al-Ula summit to end the Qatar dispute. The UAE signs reluctantly, maintaining a cooler stance toward Doha.
February, 2021: Riyadh challenges Dubai’s commercial dominance, telling foreign firms to move regional HQs to the kingdom by 2024 or lose state contracts.
July, 2021: Economic rivalry spikes. Riyadh removes tariff concessions for goods from free zones, undercutting the UAE’s trade model. Simultaneously, a rare dispute erupts at OPEC as the UAE blocks a Saudi-led deal, demanding a higher crude oil production baseline.
April, 2023: In Sudan’s war, Riyadh hosts ceasefire talks supporting the army, while UN experts accuse ​the UAE of arming the rival Rapid Support Forces, which Abu Dhabi denies.
December 8, 2025: Tensions peak in Yemen as the UAE-backed STC seizes oilfields in Hadramout, crossing a Saudi

web-intern@dakdan.com

RELATED ARTICLES
- Advertisment -

Most Popular

Recent Comments

Translate »