Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Arafah: The Day of Awareness, Awakening, and the Spirit of Resistance

Among the most spiritually profound days in the Islamic calendar, the Day of Arafah stands as a symbol of awakening, self-knowledge, and the return of humanity toward truth. It is a day in which millions of pilgrims gather on the plain of Arafat with humility before God, seeking forgiveness, clarity, and spiritual rebirth. Yet beyond its rituals, Arafah carries a deeper message for Muslim societies: the necessity of awareness, reflection, and standing firmly against falsehood and injustice.

Among the most spiritually profound days in the Islamic calendar, the Day of Arafah stands as a symbol of awakening, self-knowledge, and the return of humanity toward truth. It is a day in which millions of pilgrims gather on the plain of Arafat with humility before God, seeking forgiveness, clarity, and spiritual rebirth. Yet beyond its rituals, Arafah carries a deeper message for Muslim societies: the necessity of awareness, reflection, and standing firmly against falsehood and injustice.

The word “Arafah” itself is rooted in the Arabic concept of “ma’rifah,” meaning recognition, understanding, and conscious awareness. It is not merely a geographical location near Mecca, nor simply a sacred day of worship. Arafah represents the moment when human beings confront themselves honestly, recognize truth from deception, and renew their moral responsibility before God and society. This spiritual consciousness has always played a central role in Islamic civilization, particularly in moments when communities faced oppression, confusion, or external domination.

One of the greatest manifestations of the spirit of Arafah can be found in the famous supplication of, known as the Dua of Arafah. In this timeless prayer, Imam Husayn speaks not only of worship, but of human dignity, justice, and the purpose of existence. The prayer invites believers to rise above fear, materialism, and ignorance in order to discover a higher truth. It teaches that true faith is inseparable from awareness and moral courage.

Throughout Islamic history, oppressive powers have often attempted to weaken societies not only through military force, but by spreading despair, division, and intellectual confusion. In response, the tradition of Arafah has remained a spiritual school of consciousness. It reminds people that liberation begins within the human soul. A society that understands its dignity cannot easily surrender to humiliation or manipulation.

In recent years, the developments surrounding Iran and the broader regional resistance movements have drawn significant attention across the world. Amid political pressure, sanctions, media narratives, and military tensions, many observers have noted the visible participation and resilience of ordinary people in public gatherings, commemorations, and demonstrations. For supporters of resistance movements, these scenes are often interpreted not simply as political expressions, but as manifestations of collective awareness and social consciousness rooted in cultural and spiritual identity.

The connection between Arafah and this growing awareness becomes especially meaningful when examining the role of public participation. The Day of Arafah teaches believers that silence in the face of injustice weakens the human spirit. It encourages individuals to become conscious participants in shaping society rather than passive observers. In this sense, large public mobilizations and visible solidarity among people can be understood as expressions of a society seeking dignity, independence, and moral clarity.

For many Iranians, concepts such as sacrifice, resistance, and standing against arrogance are deeply connected to religious memory and historical experience. The spirit of Arafah strengthens this connection by emphasizing that awareness must lead to responsibility. A believer who recognizes truth cannot remain indifferent toward oppression, whether political, economic, or cultural. This understanding has contributed to a culture in which spiritual values and social engagement often appear interconnected.

At the same time, the Day of Arafah is not a call toward hatred or blind conflict. Its essence is purification, wisdom, and ethical awakening. The supplications recited on this day repeatedly emphasize mercy, justice, humility, and self-reflection. Therefore, the true power of Arafah lies not in anger, but in enlightened consciousness. It teaches people to resist oppression without losing their humanity and to defend dignity without abandoning morality.

Modern societies face unprecedented challenges in the age of information warfare and global political polarization. Media manipulation, misinformation, and psychological pressure can shape public perception more effectively than armies. In such an environment, the message of Arafah becomes increasingly relevant. Awareness itself becomes a form of resistance. A conscious society is less vulnerable to fear, division, and external control.

The scenes of people gathering in streets, commemorating martyrs, expressing solidarity, and defending national dignity can therefore be viewed through the lens of this spiritual awareness. Whether one agrees politically or not, it is undeniable that many people perceive their participation as part of a larger moral and historical struggle. The emotional and spiritual energy behind these movements often draws deeply from Islamic traditions that emphasize sacrifice, justice, and collective responsibility.

Ultimately, the Day of Arafah is a reminder that the greatest transformation begins within the human heart. Nations become strong not only through weapons or political power, but through consciousness, unity, and moral conviction. Arafah teaches humanity that recognizing truth is the first step toward defending it. In a world increasingly shaped by injustice and uncertainty, this message continues to resonate powerfully among people seeking dignity, identity, and hope.

The enduring spirit of Arafah proves that spiritual awareness is not detached from social reality. Rather, it inspires individuals and communities to remain awake in difficult times, to preserve their humanity under pressure, and to confront oppression with wisdom and faith. This is why the message of Arafah remains alive across generations — as a timeless call toward awareness, justice, and the defense of human dignity.

Iran emerges as West Asia's organ transplant hub, turning adversity into hope for thousands

By Mina Mosallanejad

Monir still remembers the unnerving sound of the intensive care unit monitors — long, repetitive beeps that erased the difference between day and night.

For months, her heart had been failing her. Walking a few steps left her breathless, and climbing a staircase felt like carrying a mountain on her chest.

Doctors had told her that her condition had progressed too far and that a transplant was her only chance of survival. But more than death itself, she feared something else: leaving behind her young daughter before watching her grow up.

“There were nights when I stayed awake until morning, staring at the hospital ceiling while trying to silence the thoughts running through my mind,” she recounted.

Death no longer felt a distant reality. It walked beside her in gloomy and grim hospital corridors and sat quietly at the edge of her bed all the time.

Waiting for a donor heart became a form of suspended existence — a life measured not in days, but in moments of uncertainty and unpredictability.

Every time the phone rang, her pulse raced. Maybe this was the call. Maybe it wasn’t. When the call finally came, Monir says her life began again.

She never learned whose heart now beats inside her chest. She does not know which family, in the middle of unimaginable loss, agreed to donate the organs of someone they loved.

But years later, she still thinks about them constantly. “Because of them,” she says, “I got to see my daughter grow up.”

Today, Monir can walk beside her child, laugh freely, and imagine a future she once believed she would never have.

“Sometimes, I place my hand over my chest and think about the strange connection between grief and survival — how one family’s tragedy became another family’s second chance at life,” she says.

Her story is not unique. Thousands of patients across Iran live in the fragile space between hope and loss, waiting for the phone call that could save them.

The long road of organ transplantation in Iran

Modern organ transplantation in Iran began with a religious ruling that changed the trajectory of medicine in the country.

On May 21, 1989, Imam Khomeini, the late founder-leader of the Islamic Revolution, issued a historic fatwa declaring organ donation from brain-dead patients religiously permissible.

Before that, many Iranian patients requiring transplants had little choice but to travel abroad, often at enormous financial and emotional cost.

After the declaration of the fatwa, Iran performed its first kidney transplant from a brain-dead donor in 1991, followed by the first liver and heart transplants in 1993. The first lung transplant took place in 2000, while the first pancreas transplant was carried out in 2006.

The Iranian parliament formally approved the Organ Transplantation and Brain Death Act in 2000, more than a decade after the fatwa.

Two years later, organ procurement units officially began operating under medical universities across the country. From there, Iran’s transplant programs expanded rapidly.

Today, Iran performs all major vital organ transplants domestically and has become one of the region’s leading transplant centers.

In southern Iran's Shiraz city alone, one major transplant center performs hundreds of liver transplants annually — a figure that has led some specialists to describe Iran as a regional “empire of liver transplantation.”

In February 2023, Iranian surgeons announced a pioneering organ donation procedure involving donation after circulatory death (DCD), also known as donation after cardiac death.

In an interview with the Press TV website at the time, Dr. Sam Zeraatian-Nejad Davani explained that the procedure had already been successfully performed on multiple donors at Hazrat-e Rasool General Hospital in Tehran.

According to Dr. Davani, the technique could increase available organs for transplant patients by 20 to 30 percent. His team successfully transplanted kidneys, livers, lungs, and a pancreas using the method.

Specialists from the Donation and Transplantation Institute (DTI Foundation) reportedly described the achievement as among the first of its kind internationally.

Among other people who helped shape that progress in this field is Dr. Katayoun Najafizadeh, a thoracic specialist and full professor at Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, who founded the lung transplant program at Masih Daneshvari Hospital.

Over the years, she has become one of the most recognizable advocates for organ donation in Iran, working not only in operating rooms but also in public education and policy.

In 2024, Dr. Najafizadeh received international recognition at the 30th Congress of The Transplantation Society (TTS), where she was honored in the Women in Transplantation section as one of the world’s most influential women in organ donation and transplantation.

A growing culture of hope and second chances

Dr. Katayoun Najafizadeh told the Press TV website that despite the challenges facing the country’s transplant system, Iran today has the medical expertise, infrastructure, and specialized teams needed to perform highly advanced organ transplant procedures.

According to Dr. Najafizadeh, between 5,000 and 8,000 cases of brain death occur annually in Iran, and nearly half of those patients have the potential to become organ donors.

Currently, around 1,000 organ donations take place in Iran each year, saving thousands of lives and giving many critically ill patients a second chance at life.

At the same time, nearly 28,000 to 30,000 patients remain on transplant waiting lists across the country — a number that, specialists say, also reflects how many lives could potentially be transformed through greater public awareness and donor registration.

“More than fifteen people lose their lives every day while waiting for an organ,” Dr. Najafizadeh said, emphasizing the urgent need for continued public education and stronger awareness campaigns.

She believes Iran already possesses one of the region’s strongest scientific and medical foundations for transplantation, and that expanding the culture of organ donation could dramatically reduce waiting lists in the years ahead.

“Among donors whose organs are not ultimately donated, many have several healthy organs that could save lives,” she told the Press TV website. “If we can connect those opportunities to patients in need, we can save thousands more people every year.”

For specialists working in transplantation, the future of organ donation in Iran now depends less on medical capability and more on public understanding, awareness, and trust — areas they say have already improved significantly over the past decade and continue to move in a positive direction.

The cultural challenge

Over the last decade, Iran has invested heavily in public awareness campaigns surrounding organ donation. Schools, advocacy groups, transplant organizations, and media campaigns have all tried to normalize conversations around brain death and donation.

Dr. Najafizadeh, who currently leads the Iranian Organ Donation Association, says awareness has improved significantly compared to previous years. Organ donation topics have even been incorporated into 11 school textbooks across the country.

Still, she believes public understanding remains insufficient.

“If you ask many people — even officials — what brain death actually means, many still do not fully understand it,” she says.

Currently, only around 10 to 12 percent of Iranian adults hold organ donor cards.

In comparison, donor registration in some countries reaches nearly 70 percent, largely because organ donor status is integrated into driver’s licenses.

Iran has recently taken similar steps. According to Dr. Najafizadeh, authorities have begun allowing organ donor registration markers to appear on driver’s licenses as well, a change she hopes will gradually improve participation.

But she insists that the deeper issue goes beyond paperwork.

“In countries like Spain, people know organ donation the same way they know football,” she said. “That level of understanding has not yet become fully rooted in our society.”

Brain death is not coma

For transplant coordinators, the most difficult conversations often happen in hospital corridors moments after families are informed that a loved one has suffered brain death.

According to Dr. Najafizadeh, the biggest reason families refuse organ donation is simple: many still believe brain death can be reversed.

“The most widespread misconception is that brain death is not real death,” she said.

The doctor repeatedly emphasized the difference between coma and brain death.

In a coma, the brain structure remains intact, and recovery may still be possible. In brain death, however, the brain cells have irreversibly deteriorated.

“There is absolutely no possibility of recovery,” she noted.

Yet families facing sudden tragedy often struggle to accept that reality.

“Some families tell us they believe a miracle may happen,” Dr. Najafizadeh said. “We tell them the miracle is not that a brain-dead person suddenly wakes up. The miracle is that life can continue in others.”

The emotional timing makes these conversations even harder. Families are usually asked to understand an unfamiliar medical concept during the worst moments of their lives.

“We are trying to explain a scientific phenomenon at the exact moment a family is in shock and grief,” she stated. “That understanding should exist before the tragedy happens.”

For that reason, transplant advocates increasingly argue that education about brain death should begin long before people encounter it in hospitals.

Iran leads West Asia in organ donation

Dr. Najafizadeh said Iran’s transplant system stands out in several important ways, making it one of the region’s strongest and most equitable models for organ transplantation.

For years, she added, Iran has ranked first in West Asia for organ donation from brain-dead donors, though globally it remains around 30th place.

According to Dr. Najafizadeh, one of the system's biggest strengths is that transplantation costs are covered by the government.

Unlike many countries where access to transplantation depends heavily on personal wealth or insurance coverage, Iran’s transplant system operates under a different model.

When the costs of organ procurement and transplantation are covered by the government, it allows both wealthy and poor patients to receive treatment under the same framework, Dr. Najafizadeh added.

In countries such as India, she noted, financial disparities can shape the transplantation process itself.

“In some places, wealthier patients effectively pay for transplantation and even compensate donor families,” she said. “In Iran, the system was designed to prevent that inequality. That means poor and rich patients benefit equally."

Iran’s centralized support system was designed to avoid that disparity. Another distinctive feature of the Iranian system is the strict confirmation process for brain death.

Under Iranian law, she explained, four separate medical specialists must independently confirm brain death before organ procurement can proceed.

Dr. Najafizadeh said this process can be difficult and time-consuming for transplant teams, but it also creates a higher level of certainty and trust.

“When all four specialists confirm brain death separately, the confidence that the patient is truly brain dead becomes much stronger,” she noted.

Still, she acknowledges that the system has weaknesses. One major issue is that education about brain death and organ donation has not yet become a mandatory part of medical training for all healthcare workers.

“Healthcare professionals are often the first people who encounter brain-dead patients,” she said. “Yet education in this field is still not fully integrated into medical curricula.”

The doctor also points to insufficient oversight of organ procurement units across the country.

While nearly all medical universities now operate donation systems, she believes stronger supervision and evaluation mechanisms are still needed to improve performance nationwide.

When crisis interrupts transplantation

Regional instability and wartime conditions have also affected Iran’s transplant system in recent months, especially following the US-Israeli war of aggression against Iran.

According to Dr. Najafizadeh, organ donation rates dropped significantly during this period because hospitals shifted their focus toward emergency care.

“The healthcare system moved into crisis mode,” she said. “Transplantation was no longer treated as the immediate priority.”

Yet for patients on waiting lists, delays can be catastrophic.

Dr. Najafizadeh compares the daily death toll among transplant candidates to a disaster that unfolds quietly and continuously.

“If fifteen patients die every day waiting for organs,” she said, “it is like a missile striking a building full of fifteen people every single day.”

Unlike sudden catastrophes, however, these losses often happen slowly — through months or years of dialysis, respiratory failure, repeated hospitalizations, and physical decline.

“When these patients die, entire families are affected. Some families may never fully recover emotionally or financially,” she added.

For that reason, she asserted that transplantation systems must remain protected even during national emergencies.

The decision that changes everything

For patients like Monir, organ donation is not an abstract medical debate. It is the thin line between absence and survival.

Years after her transplant, she still does not know whose heart saved her life. She likely never will.

“But every ordinary moment I once feared losing — every walk with my daughter, every birthday, every future plan — now exists because another family made a decision in the middle of unbearable grief,” she says.

That invisible connection between loss and survival lies at the center of every transplant story. Inside operating rooms, surgeons perform the technical work of transplantation.

But the first and most difficult step happens elsewhere — in the moment a grieving family decides that even in death, part of their loved one’s life can continue inside someone else.

Trump ensnared by his own contradictions as Iran dictates new strategic terms: Ex-Pentagon analyst

By Alireza Kamandi

F. Michael Maloof, a former security policy analyst in the office of the US Secretary of War (formerly Defense), says US President Donald Trump has been trapped by his own contradictions and a strategic landscape in which Iran decisively dictates the terms.

In an interview with the Press TV website, he dissected Trump’s threats against Iran and subsequent retreats, noting that the US president’s claim that the retreats came at the request of Arab states in the Persian Gulf is a fabrication.

“From everyone I have spoken with in the region, Trump never consulted the Persian Gulf leaders,” he said, adding that the US president is genuinely hesitant to start another war of aggression against Iran but is under intense pressure from Israeli premier Benjamin Netanyahu.

The idea that Saudi Arabia and the UAE, the two countries currently at odds with each other, would jointly ask for a delay is “nonsensical,” Maloof stated, adding that the latest retreat after threatening military action is “another Trump fabrication.”

He, however, emphasized that if Trump does not act, Netanyahu will, adding that the Israeli premier promised “regime change” in Iran, but failed to achieve that goal and that his political survival depends on it.

“Before the war of aggression, the Strait of Hormuz was open. Now it’s a restriction for both sides,” he stated. “The current stalemate is worse than before it started.”

Asked what new card Trump might play in the event of a fresh round of aggression, Maloof appeared skeptical that any viable option exists. “Trump has never had a coherent strategic outline. How does he intend to reach Iran’s nuclear materials hundreds of meters underground?”

A frontal war, he said, was met with Iran’s asymmetric capabilities – striking radar systems, air bases in the Persian Gulf countries, and refueling aircraft, inflicting tremendous financial losses on the US. If Israel becomes involved and targets Iranian infrastructure again, he noted, the consequences would be catastrophic for the entire region.

“The Persian Gulf states’ desalination plants would be hit. Those countries would become uninhabitable. Israeli desalination plants would also be targeted, leading to a shutdown,” he said.

Domestically, Maloof noticed that American public opinion is firmly against another war.

“It has doubled our own prices for fuel, food, and fertilizer. Trump is a billionaire; he doesn’t have to worry about the budget, but he is affecting all of us,” he remarked, adding that Iran is running a war of attrition.

“Time does not matter to Iran, but it does to Trump because of the coming elections. He will lose power and control in the November elections. He thinks everything is like an on-and-off switch, but he has no idea how to end this game.”

Maloof noted that the US has a very limited window. “America has fired a great number of its munitions, sending much to Ukraine. Stockpiles are depleted. Tomahawks and long-range missiles are extremely expensive and limited, and some weapons systems require years to rebuild.”

US regional bases are also vulnerable, and Iran has already demonstrated it can hit them, so Washington would have to rely on naval resources, and they need replenishment, he said.

“Now summer heat is approaching, which will impact war-fighting capabilities. The longer Iran draws this out, the more disadvantages accumulate for the US,” the analyst asserted.

When asked whether Iran could enforce a final-stage blockade by closing the Bab al-Mandab Strait, Maloof was unequivocal.

“Certainly, it is an option. It would crush over 90 percent of the world economy and lead to depression. Yemen would assist Iran,” he stated, commending Tehran’s calculated and measured approach so far, and adding that it still holds substantial resources in reserve, including hypersonic missiles and drones.

“The more ships the US deploys in the region, the more vulnerable it becomes. There is no match between what Iran offers and what the US insists upon. I don’t know what Trump is talking about in terms of acceptance,” he told the Press TV website.

Regarding a recent US Senate resolution to curb Trump’s war powers, Maloof stated that while there is Republican dissatisfaction and total Democratic opposition to this unprovoked and illegal war, the resolution will go nowhere.

“It has to be signed by the president, and he will veto it. They don’t have the two-thirds votes to override,” he asserted.

Looking ahead to Trump’s political future once the war’s dust settles, he predicted the aggression will not end before Trump’s term does.

“The Iran war has cost him politically and militarily. He has lost influence across the Global South. He thought it could be like Venezuela, just go in and run. Instead, Trump has demonstrated the limits of US power. The Chinese have learned that if they want to take Taiwan, the US will do nothing. America cannot wage a third world war, and it will get no help from Europeans,” he said.

“The policeman of the world is no longer the US. Trump has left himself totally vulnerable. He has lost all credibility as a result of this war. Iran has probably taught him the lessons he refused to learn from the rest of the Middle East.”

The mirage of power: UAE's overreach and the inevitable road toward strategic collapse

By Mohammad Molaei

There is a reason that weight classes exist in almost all combat sports. When you strip away all the finer details, the nuances of fighting strategy, training regimens, and discipline, the simple truth of raw power and potential remains.

The reality is that a larger, heavier fighter of comparable skill can hit incredibly harder, is more difficult to control, and perhaps most importantly, can endure more punishment than a smaller, weaker opponent.

This overarching logic has largely governed the relationship between states throughout human civilization, with successful leaders understanding their position in the broader geopolitical landscape and selecting the best possible courses of action given their capabilities.

The United Arab Emirates seeks to challenge this common understanding. It has spent the past 15 years cultivating an image of itself as a regional powerhouse, a small, wealthy state that at first glance punches far above its weight in influence and geopolitical weight, shaping West Asian and African politics through checkbook diplomacy and military interventions.

Yet beneath the gleaming towers of Dubai and Abu Dhabi lies a strategic reality that Emirati policymakers seem determined to ignore, with an unexplainable, almost religious fervor.

The UAE has systematic, fundamental vulnerabilities that its wealth cannot mitigate and its military hardware cannot protect. This small federation of just over a million citizens has embarked on a foreign policy more befitting a continental power, weaving a web of military commitments, ideological confrontations, and grand alliances that its structure and resources cannot possibly sustain.

History is littered with the ruins of small, wealthy states that mistook their vaults for ramparts and ignored their surrounding strategic realities. UAE’s current trajectory suggests it is repeating mistakes that have proven catastrophic for others.

Wealth without depth

There is no dearth of parables for the UAE’s present course. Renaissance Venice, once the commercial heart of the Mediterranean, entangled itself in the Italian Wars of the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, believing its wealth and naval power could secure territorial ambitions on the Italian mainland.

The result was the War of the League of Cambrai (1508-1516), where Venice found itself facing a coalition of virtually every major European power. This war demonstrated the inherent vulnerabilities of the Venetian state.

Venice had a tiny native population, a military dependent on foreign mercenaries, and a capital whose legendary defenses were useless against coalitions that could strangle its trade. Venice survived the War of the League of Cambrai, but only after near-total defeat, its treasury emptied and its power permanently broken. The republic retreated from its grand ambitions and accepted a diminished role in European affairs.

It learned, too late and at too high a cost, that economic influence is not a currency redeemable for military security or strategic depth.

Closer to the present, Kuwait’s pre-1990 regional policies offer another cautionary example. Wealthy with oil revenues and enjoying the patronage of a superpower, Kuwait pursued a foreign policy of stunning recklessness. It bankrolled Saddam Hussein’s war against Iran while simultaneously demanding immediate debt repayment, engaged in economic warfare by flooding the oil market, and dismissed Baghdad’s escalating threats as bluster.

Kuwaiti policymakers operated under the illusion that their financial indispensability and their cozy relationship with Washington constituted an inviolable shield. When the Saddam regime faced economic crisis and failed in its military adventurism against Iran, Kuwait discovered that its wealth made it a target rather than acting as its protector, and its military capabilities were wholly inadequate to defend against a larger, furious neighbor.

The Kuwaiti illusion evaporated in the span of two days under the tracks of Iraqi tanks. Kuwait’s existence was solely preserved by a massive, externally-led coalition, and the tiny kingdom never regained its previous prominence in the region and the wider Arab world. The lesson is stark – for a small, wealthy state nestled among larger powers, hubris is the prelude to catastrophe.

The UAE’s leadership appears to have studied these histories only to conclude they are the exception. Abu Dhabi has inserted itself into conflicts across the Arab world and Africa in Yemen, Libya, Sudan, the Horn of Africa, and beyond, trying to project influence through military interventions, proxy forces, supporting ethnic violence, propping up warlords, and financial inducements.

Simultaneously, it has pursued total strategic alignment with the Israeli regime, positioning itself as a frontline actor in the US-Israeli war against Iran. These commitments reflect an ambition that vastly exceeds the Arab country’s capacity to sustain them.

Abu Dhabi exhibits a money-fueled arrogance, believing its economic clout and foreign alliances render it untouchable. It is repeating history-proven errors with a modern, high-tech sheen, while being blind to the structural realities that ultimately dictate survival.

Demographics and geography

The UAE’s ambitions are built upon a foundation of sand in a figurative and a literal sense. Its first and most profound vulnerability is its feeble demographics.

With a citizenry of approximately one million in a total population exceeding ten million, the Emiratis are an extreme minority in their own territory. The country’s entire economy, security apparatus, and daily functioning are utterly dependent on a transient, non-citizen workforce. In any sustained regional war, the mass exodus of this population, from engineers and bankers to service workers and laborers, would trigger a comprehensive, instantaneous economic and social collapse.

There is no resilient national body to mobilize around the flag against a foreign threat, no deep bench of citizen-soldiers or workers to fall back upon. What little connection the majority of the inhabitants of Emirati deserts have with the land will be quickly severed at the first onset of socio-economic hardship. This creates a fragility that no amount of surveillance or control can ultimately remedy.

Perhaps the most glaring vulnerability lies in Emirati geography. The UAE’s entire modern existence is concentrated on a narrow coastal strip across the Persian Gulf and was never meant to host large population centers.

Its critical infrastructure, the desalination plants that provide 90% of its usable water, the Jebel Ali and Fujairah ports, the Abu Dhabi and Dubai international airports, the towering financial centers, and the vast oil and gas processing facilities, are all located within a few dozen kilometers of the coastline, exposed and immovable.

There is no strategic depth, no possibility of retreat or dispersion. For an actor like Iran or its network of regional allies, which possess sophisticated drones and precision-guided missiles, the UAE presents a target list with an almost comically absurd concentration.

This concentration of critical assets in easily targetable locations is a vulnerability that no amount of missile defense can fully mitigate. Modern missile and drone technology, now widely proliferated across the region, has made static defenses increasingly porous, particularly against short-range saturating attack waves.

A coordinated attack on a handful of targets could paralyze the country within days, turning its cities into uninhabitable zones. 

Unlike states with hinterlands, river systems, or significant groundwater reserves, the UAE would face immediate catastrophe if its desalination capacity were significantly degraded. The population would have no water supply within days. This is an existential vulnerability, and it is well understood by all potential adversaries.

The vulnerability of the UAE in any serious, sustained war is so glaring, so obvious that its hawkish policies are utterly baffling. Its leadership has chosen to place all its eggs in the most conspicuous and indefensible basket imaginable while simultaneously picking fights with neighbors who have the means and willpower to smash it with remarkable ease.

The illusion of military capability

The UAE spends lavishly on military, acquiring advanced fighter aircraft, missile defense systems, and naval vessels, predominantly from Western suppliers. Emirati officials point to these acquisitions as evidence of military modernization, and Western arms contractors are happy to reinforce this narrative while enjoying their billions in profit. But hardware alone does not constitute military capability, and the UAE’s military posture is built on foundations that would (and did) crumble under sustained pressure.

The Emirati military is fundamentally dependent on foreign personnel at every level. Expatriates fill not only technical and support roles but also significant portions of combat units. The country’s citizen population of approximately one million, of whom perhaps half are male, and only a fraction is fit to serve, cannot sustain a large standing military, much less absorb casualties in a protracted war.

This demographic reality means that the UAE’s military is, in effect, a mercenary force reliant on foreign nationals whose loyalty is contractual rather than national. In war, particularly one where the UAE’s survival is at stake, the reliability of such forces is questionable at best.

Moreover, the UAE’s advanced weapons systems require foreign technical support, maintenance, and often operational expertise. The F-35 fighters that Abu Dhabi sought (and may eventually acquire) and other military aircraft cannot be maintained or operated effectively without Western contractors and technical personnel.

The same applies to missile defense systems, naval vessels, and intelligence infrastructure. This dependence means that the UAE’s military capability exists only insofar as its Western suppliers, particularly the United States, permit it to exist.

This reality was in full display when Americans and their allies prioritized the defense of Israel in the recent war despite the pleas of Persian Gulf states, including the UAE.

The UAE’s interventions in Yemen illustrated these limitations. Despite years of involvement, vast expenditures, and access to advanced weaponry, Emirati forces and their proxies achieved no decisive outcomes. The intervention instead exposed the UAE’s inability to project sustained military power even in its immediate neighborhood.

When Yemeni forces and their allies demonstrated the capacity to strike back, launching drone and missile attacks on Emirati territory, the UAE was forced to withdraw from direct involvement, a tacit admission that it could not protect its own homeland nor bear the costs of retaliation against its infrastructure.

The Israeli alignment

The UAE’s decision to normalize relations with the Israeli regime through the so-called Abraham Accords was celebrated in Western capitals and portrayed by Emirati officials as a bold step toward regional stability and economic opportunity.

By embracing Israel, Emiratis believed that they could leverage the powerful Israeli lobby in Washington to position themselves at the forefront of regional politics at the expense of their Arab neighbors and Iran, while benefiting from the protection and assistance of Israeli and American technological and military might. 

In reality, however, normalization represented a profound miscalculation that traded away the UAE’s most valuable asset, its flexibility, in exchange for exposure to wars it cannot control. Prior to normalization, the UAE maintained a degree of strategic ambiguity in its regional relationships. While aligned with the US and hostile to Iran, Abu Dhabi was not formally committed to the Palestinian issue or directly implicated in Israeli military aggressions, even if the truth was quite the opposite.

Normalization ended that ambiguity. The UAE is now identified, both regionally and internationally, as a staunch ally of Israel, and its security is tied to Israeli policy decisions.

This alignment has made the UAE a legitimate target for Iranian retaliation in ways it was not previously. Tehran views the so-called Abraham Accords as part of a broader American-Israeli strategy to elevate Israel to the hegemon of the region, and the UAE’s participation in that strategy has placed it squarely in the crosshairs.

Moreover, Emiratis provided ample support for the recent war of aggression against Iran, allowed their soil and airspace to be used to strike Iranian territory, and were even foolish enough to directly, albeit quietly, enter the war on behalf of Israel by attacking Iranian oil refining facilities in Lavan Island and sending their MALE drones inside Iranian airspace.

The Islamic Republic demonstrated that it is willing to strike at threats with zero hesitation. The UAE has gained some surveillance technology and diplomatic favor in Washington out of its alliance with Israel, but it has paid for these trinkets dearly. These policy decisions have left Abu Dhabi a hostage to a cycle of Israeli-US war it cannot shape and may not survive.

Overextension

The misjudgment of the Israeli alliance is compounded by a pattern of aggressive overcommitment across multiple theaters.

In Yemen, the UAE spearheaded a catastrophic war that created one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises. Initially partnering with Saudi Arabia, it later pursued its own agenda by backing southern separatists, fragmenting the anti-Ansarullah coalition, and creating a permanent quagmire, which ended in a total falling out with Saudis in Yemen and Emirati withdrawal from the country.

This adventure cost billions and ironically, empowered and battle-hardened Yemeni resistance movement that can now regularly fire missiles at Emirati targets if it decides to.

In Libya, the UAE became a primary spoiler, pouring weapons and mercenaries into support of Khalifa Haftar’s forces. This not only prolonged a devastating civil war but also positioned the UAE squarely against Turkey, a regional actor with greater demographic and military weight.

In the Horn of Africa, its attempts to militarize the Red Sea coast through bases in Eritrea and Berbera have destabilized regional dynamics and drawn the ire of Saudi Arabia, Somalia, and other actors, creating new animosities for minimal gain.

Emirati backing of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in Sudan has led to some of the worst cases of ethnic violence in the 21st century, fueling a bloody conflict that has no end in sight.

Each of these interventions reveals a pattern. Emiratis show a willingness to use financial muscle, proxy forces, and wanton violence to shape outcomes. This policy is coupled with a total absence of a viable exit strategy or consideration for long-term stability.

The UAE acts as a disruptor, but lacks the capacity to be a consolidator. It can start fires but cannot put them out, and now finds itself surrounded by the smoldering consequences of its own actions. This network of commitments is stretching the UAE’s resources, while multiplying its list of adversaries and providing little tangible security benefit.

The path not taken

The fundamental question facing the UAE is whether its current trajectory is sustainable, and the evidence suggests it is not. There is an alternative path, though it would require Emirati policymakers to abandon the ambitions that have defined the past decade.

The UAE could prioritize maintaining cordial relations with its neighbors over seeking regional influence and alignment with the genocidal Zionist entity. It could scale back interventions in distant wars and conflicts, recognizing that these commitments drain resources without enhancing security.

Such a recalibration would require acknowledging limits, an admission that wealth and ambition do not translate automatically into power and security. It would mean accepting a more modest regional role, prioritizing survival over influence.

For a leadership that has invested heavily in the false narrative of the UAE as a rising power, this would be a difficult shift. But continuing on the current path risks a far more painful outcome.

In a future regional crisis, such as another major confrontation between Iran and Israel or a broader regional war involving multiple actors, the UAE would likely find itself isolated and exposed. Its infrastructure would be vulnerable. Its military, dependent on foreign support, will prove unreliable or unavailable. And its alliances, particularly with the US, will prove less robust than Emirati planners assume, especially if US administrations decide that defending Emirati interests is not worth the cost of deeper involvement in the West Asian crisis.

Historical precedents suggest how such scenarios unfold. Small, wealthy states that overextend themselves typically face a moment of reckoning where their vulnerabilities are exposed and their options narrow dramatically.

The UAE has built a strategic posture on foundations that cannot bear the weight of its ambitions. History suggests that such miscalculations are eventually corrected, often abruptly and painfully.

Whether Emirati policymakers recognize this reality and adjust course, or whether they continue to believe that wealth can substitute for strategic depth, will determine whether the UAE navigates the coming years and decades as a stable, secure state or as another cautionary tale of overreach and miscalculation.