Monday, June 01, 2026

Iran Has Redefine And Changed Asymmetric Warfare

Muslim Mahmood

In the modern landscape of global conflict, the Islamic Republic of Iran has moved beyond traditional defensive postures to implement an offensive deterrent strategy that challenges the conventional military supremacy of America and zionist Israel.

While Asymmetric Warfare is traditionally defined as a conflict where a weaker power leverages unconventional tactics to level the playing field against a superior force, Iran’s current model has evolved into a sophisticated, decentralized system designed to absorb pressure and redistribute it outward.

This report investigates how technological indigenization, intricate networks across Lebanon and Gaza through local allies, and economic chokepoints have collectively redefined the cost-benefit analysis of modern war in West Asia.

Timeline of Strategic Evolution

  • 1980–1988: The Iraqi-imposed War on Iran serves as the foundational “bitter experience,” forcing the country toward domestic mass production and creative military doctrines due to severe arms embargos.
  • 1970–1974: Iran joins the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and begins advocating for a West Asia free from nuclear weapons.
  • 2015: The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) is signed, aiming to ensure the peaceful nature of Iran’s nuclear program.
  • May 2018: The United States under Donald Trump unilaterally withdraws from the JCPOA, initiating a “maximum pressure” campaign of sanctions.
  • October 2023: A major operation begins in Gaza, leading to increased regional tensions and the activation of various resistance groups.
  • February 28, 2026: Launch of direct US-zionist military attack on Iran, with the stated objective of eliminating Tehran’s nuclear capabilities.
  • April–May 2026: After roughly 84 days of US-zionist war on Iran, reports emerge of significant US military losses and a global energy crisis resulting from the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

The Deadly Triangle: Allies, Missiles, and Drones

Iran’s redefinition of asymmetry rests on a deadly triangle consisting of a vast human network, diverse missile programs, and low-cost drone technology. This strategy allows the state to strike without engaging in direct, head-to-head military confrontation, effectively pushing the battlefield away from its own borders.

The first pillar involves allied forces, referred to as the Axis of Resistance, extending from Hizbullah in Lebanon to groups in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen. This network provides “strategic depth,” forcing opponents to fight on multiple fronts before ever reaching Iranian territory.

Furthermore, these groups allow for plausible deniability, as Iran can claim, quite rightly, that they act independently, complicating the legal grounds for direct retaliation.

The second and third pillars involve technological proliferation. Lacking a modern air force, Iran has developed the largest and most precise missile arsenal in West Asia, utilizing underground missile cities to ensure a second-strike capability. Most notably, the rise of suicide drones, such as the Shahed series, has shifted the war economy.

A drone costing roughly $20,000 can successfully destroy a multi-million dollar tank or aircraft, creating a massive cost imbalance. Reports from the 2026 war on Iran indicate that US forces lost 42 military planes in just 40 days, including 24 MQ-9 Reaper drones and an F-35A Lightning II, damaged by ground fire.

Mosaic Defense and Decentralized Power

Traditional military doctrine suggests that removing the central leadership of any state will cause the system to collapse. The Iranian military, however, is built on a distributed power model known as the Mosaic Defense.

This strategy envisions the country as a spider web where each local unit or “node” is responsible for its own defense. If the central command is disrupted, the local units continue to operate independently.

This decentralized structure makes “shock and awe” or decapitation strikes largely ineffective. Because the system does not depend on a single center or even on winning in the traditional sense, it is significantly harder to neutralize.

This resilience is coupled with the indigenization of military knowledge. Unlike many of its neighbors, Iran does not rely on western states for military equipment, parts or repairs. If the borders are closed, the domestic production lines continue to function, allowing for sustainability in prolonged, exhausting conflicts.

Economic Leverage and Global Chokepoints

A critical component of Iran’s redefined asymmetric strategy is the use of geographic leverage to exert global economic pressure. The Strait of Hormuz serves as the world’s energy artery, and Iran has demonstrated the ability to threaten or close this waterway. During the US-zionist war of aggression, closure of the Strait led to a global energy crisis, with US gas prices spiking above $4 to $5 per gallon.

Iranian officials maintain that they are the guardians of this passage but reserve the right under international law to restrict access to belligerent parties or aggressors during a state of war. By holding a gas nozzle to the heads of the global population, Iran forces international actors to weigh the high economic costs of escalation.

This form of warfare moves beyond the physical battlefield. It impacts global markets causing financial pressure that can undermine the political will of states with democratic pretensions.

Institutional Failures and the Limits of Conventional Might

The ongoing conflicts involving major powers like America, Israel and Russia suggest a pattern where military superiority fails to convert into political victory. In the specific case of the US-zionist war on Iran, critics in US Congress, such as Representative Thomas Massie, have questioned the lack of a clear mission and the legal basis for preemptive war. Massie noted that the Department of War conceded there was no evidence of an “imminent” Iranian strike prior to the commencement of hostilities.

Furthermore, the alleged invincibility of advanced platforms like the F-35s has been challenged by Iranian ground fire and drone saturation. The high cost of the 40-day war—estimated at $29 billion due to aircraft losses and infrastructure damage—highlights the inefficiency of using expensive conventional assets against a highly adaptable asymmetric opponent (The actual cost is believed to be around $200 billion when all factors are taken into account).

As noted by analysts, the US and Israel are effectively checkmated by a country that can absorb immense pressure while inflicting significant economic and military damage at a fraction of the cost.

Strategic Stalemate and the Necessity of Diplomacy

The current state of affairs suggests that the old model of military dominance is increasingly obsolete in the face of decentralized, technologically empowered resistance. Iran’s strategy of winning without fighting focuses on making the cost of war so high that enemies hesitate to engage.

While the Islamic Republic of Iran faces severe economic pressure and international sanctions for its policies, the deterrent effect of its deadly triangle has successfully prevented total invasion.

Public statements of Iranian officials, such as those in the Foreign Ministry, emphasize that they do not seek to expand the boundaries of war but will react decisively to acts of aggression. Conversely, US lawmakers have expressed frustration that the Trump regime’s claims of beating Iran do not match the reality of a closed Strait and a decimated drone fleet.

With both sides sticking to their red lines—the US refusing to concede on the Strait of Hormuz (this may be changing) and Iran refusing to give up its nuclear leverage—the situation remains a stalemate. Diplomacy and patient negotiations may be the only viable path forward.

Hajj Monetization And Strategic Transit Revenues: A Comparative Analysis

Mohamed Ousman

The question of how sacred geography and strategic geography are managed in the contemporary Muslim world raises difficult ethical and political contradictions. On one side is the Hajj system administered by the illegitimate Bani Saud regimer, who are widely criticized in some Islamic circles as being increasingly commercialized through fees, quotas, and regulatory constraints.

On the other side are state-controlled strategic waterways such as the Strait of Hormuz, where Islamic Iran’s geopolitical position enables it to influence maritime access and extract economic advantage through transit-related mechanisms and strategic leverage.

While the two systems are structurally different—the former rooted in ritual administration and the latter in geopolitical economics—critics draw parallels between them as forms of controlling collective Muslim assets for state benefit. In the words of Imam Muhammad Al Asi, “Makkah, Al Ka‘bah, Al Bayt Al Haram and Al Qibla no longer are functional—they exist but they don’t function!”

This framing suggests a transformation of sacred institutions into managed systems of exploitative control rather than spaces of unrestricted communal Muslim unity.

Similarly, the critique extends beyond ritual space into political economy: “We assemble at Makkah, Al Ka‘bah, Al Bayt Al Haram and Al Qibla at a discounted rate… only 2 million… are permitted to go” despite a global Muslim population exceeding two billion.

In contrast, maritime chokepoints like Hormuz represent not ritual access but strategic infrastructure, where Islamic state sovereignty translates into economic control over global shipping flows for between 6-7 billion globally oppressed people.

The comparison is not to equate sacred with commercial, but to interrogate how authority, access, and benefit distribution operate within Muslim governance systems—be it in sacred strategic or commercially strategic domains.

Imam Muhammad Al Asi: Qur’anic Framework of Sacred Access and Political Accountability

Within Al Asi’s interpretive framework, the Hajj is not merely a ritual obligation but a structural representation of global Muslim unity that has been compromised by Bani Saud state nationalization, usurpation, control, class hierarchy, and political restriction. He argues that the egalitarianism of Islam has been replaced by managed commercialized control systems.

He states sharply: “Al Hajj has become something personal… We say to that type of attitude you haven’t fulfilled your obligation. Al Hajj is a social obligation.” This critique reframes the Hajj as a collective Islamic political event rather than an individual spiritual exercise.

A central theme in his discourse is the distortion of equality in sacred space. He notes that “only 2 million… are permitted to go” while the broader ummah remains excluded. In this reading, restriction is not merely logistical but ideological.

It reflects a breakdown in the Qur’anic vision of unity symbolized by ihram, where “there is no individuality, no kinship or race identity that can override the sense of community.”

He extends this argument into political economy, suggesting that Muslim rulers have detached religious ritualistic practice from justice: “These aristocratic princes do not want to be bothered with an iman/divine commitment that holds them responsible for hoarding their wealth while their neighbors in Africa and Asia are starving.”

This moral critique becomes sharper when he connects governance to accountability structures in early Islamic history. He recalls the practice of public accountability during Hajj under the legitimate Khalifa, ĘżUmar ibn al-Khattab, where governors were summoned and questioned before the public.

This is presented as a model of integrated “spiritual”-political governance, in contrast to modern systems where “Muslims have been repressed… under emergency laws… military rule.”

The Qur’anic axis of his argument is the concept of divine sovereignty as active governance rather than abstract “belief”. He emphasizes: “Allah has been for practical purposes… absent in our conceptual sense.” This absence allows worldly power to replace divine accountability, where rulers operate under nationalistic geopolitical fear rather than taqwa i.e. violating the moral and ethical standards of Allah.

In his framework, control over Hajj becomes symbolic of broader governance failure. The sacred becomes administratively restricted, while political authority becomes disconnected from Qur’anic justice.

His critique suggests that the Hajj system mirrors wider structural issues in Muslim political life, viz: fragmentation, lack of shura, and absence of public moral agency.

Thus, any comparison with strategic toll systems, such as maritime transit control, must be understood not as equivalence. It is a parallel manifestation of how Muslim states should convert shared resources (sacred or geographic) into instruments that serve the Ummah and the oppressed peoples.

The Islamic Republic of Iran’s control over the Strait of Hormuz is unlike the abuse of strategic authority that serve the enemies of the Ummah and the oppressed peoples as is the case of the nationalization of the Haramayn by Bani Saud in Arabia.

Imam Zafar Bangash: Sirah-Based Governance and Historical Continuity

Bangash approaches Islamic governance through a sirah-oriented lens, emphasizing prophetic precedent and historical continuity in political organisation. In this framework, legitimacy is derived not only from authority but from alignment with the Prophetic model of justice, consultation, and resistance to coercion.

The sirah narrative emphasizes that early Islamic governance was rooted in accountability and collective consultation (shura), particularly during moments of conflict and state formation.

The example of the Prophet’s decision-making process during military and political crises is often cited to demonstrate that authority was not absolute but consultative and responsive.

In this light, modern restrictions on Hajj participation or administrative monetization of sacred access are often criticized as deviations from Prophetic governance principles. The issue is not merely financial cost but whether governance structures reflect the egalitarian ethos of the sirah or reproduce hierarchical control systems.

Bangash’s framework also highlights resistance to unjust authority as a continuation of the Prophetic struggle. This includes opposition to systems perceived as prioritizing state interest over communal welfare.

In this reading, any system that limits access to sacred spaces or commodifies collective obligations risks contradicting the foundational sirah model.

When compared to strategic economic leverage, such as control over maritime chokepoints, the sirah framework does not reject state sovereignty but demands that such sovereignty be exercised within divinely ordained ethical and consultative limits. The key question is whether governance structures serve the ummah and the oppressed peoples as is the case of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s control over the Strait of Hormuz or it instrumentalizes shared assets for state power accumulation that serve the enemies of the Ummah and the oppressed peoples as is the case of Bani Saud in Arabia.

Dr. Kalim Siddiqui: Islamic Movement Theory and Structural Power

Siddiqui provides a structural analysis of Muslim political fragmentation through Islamic Movement Theory, focusing on power, legitimacy, and ideological coherence. In his framework, the central problem of the Muslim world is not merely policy deviation but the absence of an integrated global Islamic movement capable of coordinating governance, economy, and identity.

From this perspective, both the administration of Hajj and strategic economic zones reflect fragmented sovereignty within the Muslim world. Instead of a unified ummah exercising collective stewardship over sacred and strategic geography, authority is dispersed among nation-states operating within global power structures and in the case of Islamic Iran causing tension within the global power structures.

Siddiqui’s analysis would interpret the regulation of Hajj and the strategic leverage over maritime routes as symptoms of the same underlying condition: the transformation of the ummah into competing state units rather than a unified civilizational actor. This fragmentation prevents the emergence of coordinated decision-making structures based on shura at a global level.

He argues that without movement-level integration, Islamic governance remains reactive rather than transformative. In this sense, both religious administration and geopolitical strategy risk becoming embedded within state-centric logic rather than ummatic purpose.

The implication is that issues such as Hajj accessibility or transit control cannot be resolved purely administratively. They require a broader reconstitution of Muslim political agency through organised movements capable of transcending nation-state and sectarian fragmentation to decisively deal with traitors such as Bani Saud and those with nationalistic tendencies within Islamic Iran to integrate global Muslims into the governance structures of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Across these three frameworks, a shared analytical thread emerges: Muslim governance—whether in strategic sacred space or strategic geography—reflects deeper questions of authority, access, and representation.

Al Asi highlights the theodological (a word coined by Al-Asi to integrate theology with ideology) and moral crisis of restricted sacred access and the erosion of shura-based accountability. Bangash situates governance within sirah continuity and Prophetic precedent. Siddiqui frames both religious and geopolitical systems as products of structural fragmentation within the ummah.

Together, these perspectives suggest that both Hajj administration and strategic transit systems are not isolated technical issues but expressions of how Muslim political authority can be better organized, justified, and used to contest gargantuan oppressors such as the zionists and imperialists in the modern world.

Bibliography

Al-Ä€sÄ«, Muhammad: The Ascendant Qur’an: Realigning Man to the Divine Power Culture. Various Volumes. Institute of Contemporary Islamic Thought, (2008-2024).

Bangash, Zafar: In Pursuit of the Power of Islam: Major Writings of Kalim Siddiqui. Toronto: The Open Press (1996).

Bangash, Zafar: Power Manifestations of the Sirah. Toronto: ICIT. (2011).

Bangash, Zafar: Editorial introduction to Siddiqui’s collected works.

Bangash, Zafar: Articles in Crescent International (various issues)

https://crescent.icit-digital.org/articles/the-seerah-as-a-model-for-the-total-transformation-of-society

https://crescent.icit-digital.org/articles/power-dimensions-in-the-sirah-of-the-noble-messenger-saws

https://crescent.icit-digital.org/articles/eid-milad-un-nabi-an-opportunity-to-broaden-our-perception-of-the-seerah

https://crescent.icit-digital.org/articles/the-importance-of-re-examining-the-seerah-of-the-prophet

https://crescent.icit-digital.org/articles/the-centrality-of-the-prophet-s-use-of-power-in-the-method-of-the-seerah

Siddiqui, Kalim: The Islamic Movement: A Systems Approach. London: The Muslim Institute, (1976).

Siddiqui, Kalim: Issues in the Islamic Movement. Toronto: The Open Press (1982).

Siddiqui, Kalim: Beyond the Muslim Nation-State. The Muslim Institute (1977).

Siddiqui, Kalim: Stages of Islamic Revolution. London: The Open Press, (1996).

Kingdom of Saudi ArabiaHajj

UAE’s safe-haven myth breaks under the weight of war

Dubai sold itself as a refuge from the region’s wars, but Abu Dhabi’s alignment with Washington and Tel Aviv has brought those wars to its doorstep.

For two decades, the UAE sold the world an image of glass towers rising above a quiet Persian Gulf, capital moving without friction, and luxury sealed off from the wars consuming the rest of West Asia. 

If Dubai was the showroom, then Abu Dhabi was the command center, with the US security umbrella acting as the invisible architecture holding the model together.

The US-Israeli war on Iran exposed the bargain. Washington did not shield the Emirates from escalation; it made the country part of the target map. What followed was not only a military shock, but a direct hit to the economy that depends most on calm. 

Tourism slowed, flights were disrupted, and insurance costs rose. Investors began looking toward Asia Pacific, while wealthy residents who had treated Dubai as a refuge from West Asia’s crises were forced to ask what that tax-free shelter was now worth.

The war cast a long shadow over Gulf economies and exposed the limits of relying on US protection as a substitute for sovereign security. 

The result was a hurried reprioritization as Gulf governments began “securing the economy” through stronger defense spending, localization of strategic industries, and alternative trade corridors designed to reduce exposure to chokepoints.

The impact was clearest in the UAE, which absorbed the largest share of Iranian strikes after its declared involvement in the aggression against Iran. As the confrontation widened, the damage moved far beyond market indicators. It began to reorder the security–economic equation on which Dubai and Abu Dhabi were built: stability, tourism, finance, global services, and a state-managed promise that war would remain elsewhere.

Dubai’s luxury machine stalls

The first shock hit tourism and luxury, two pillars of Dubai’s economy and two sectors most dependent on the illusion of calm. 

Moody’s Analytics projected that Dubai hotel occupancy could plunge from 80 percent before the war to just 10 percent in the second quarter, a near-shutdown for a city whose economy depends on uninterrupted flows of tourists, conferences, and luxury spending.

Passenger traffic through Dubai airports fell by 66 percent in one month, and the first quarter saw a loss of around 2.5 million passengers compared with the same period last year. Hotels cut prices at an unprecedented pace as demand contracted and high-end spending fled the uncertainty.

As the war escalated, the non-oil economy took a direct blow. The UAE Purchasing Managers’ Index fell to its lowest level in more than five years, while overseas export orders recorded the sharpest decline since 2009, excluding the coronavirus period. With shipping disrupted in the Strait of Hormuz, freight, insurance, and energy costs surged. Companies raised prices at the fastest pace since 2011, even as sales slowed and consumer spending weakened.

The more dangerous hit was reputational. Dubai attracted hundreds of thousands of wealthy residents and investors by offering low taxes, financial openness, and a sense that the Gulf city had somehow escaped the region around it. That image began to fracture as security risks mounted. 

Requests for alternative residency reportedly rose by more than 40 percent, while Milan, Singapore, and Istanbul began absorbing part of the wealth that had once concentrated in Dubai. For an economy built on capital flows, real estate, and services, this is not a passing inconvenience. It strikes the core of the model.

The war also threatened one of the most important nerves of the UAE economy: aviation and logistics. Dubai’s ambition to function as a global air node linking Asia, Europe, and Africa depends on open skies and predictable risk. Airspace closures, flight disruptions, and rising security threats damaged that flow, placing daily pressure on an economy tied to travel, trade, and services.

The logistical shock reached the maritime front as well. The UAE depends on the Strait of Hormuz, through which at least 20 percent of global oil and liquefied gas trade passes, along with around 2.4 percent of global non-oil trade. 

Abu Dhabi’s logistics response shows how quickly the UAE has had to reroute its trade architecture. Borouge signed agreements with Gulftainer at Khor Fakkan Port, Gulftainer Shipping, and Etihad Rail to expand export options and build more flexible sea–rail routes, while AD Ports established a land bridge from Fujairah and Khor Fakkan to Khalifa Port, Jebel Ali, and Sharjah using 800 trucks and four daily Etihad Rail services. 

AD Ports and Borouge have also agreed to study an alternative export hub in Fujairah that would help bypass the Strait of Hormuz. Each detour raises the cost of transport, insurance, and logistics, eroding part of the advantage on which the UAE built its reputation as a fast, secure trade hub.

Capital tests the exit doors

The war did not only hit the movement of people and goods; it also began to shake confidence in the UAE’s financial position itself, which is the most dangerous pressure point for an economy dependent on foreign flows. 

During the height of the escalation in the spring of 2026, financial reports described international institutions reassessing their footprint in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, with some assets and liquidity shifted toward centers viewed as safer, including Singapore and Zurich.

Global banks, including Citigroup and Standard Chartered, moved staff out of Dubai offices and shifted to remote work after Iran threatened Gulf banking interests linked to the US and Israel. Citigroup also temporarily closed most of its UAE branches as a precaution. 

At the same time, Abu Dhabi weighed freezing billions of dollars in Iranian assets, while reports pointed to a wider crackdown on Iran-linked money changers and financial channels in Dubai. For investors, the Emirati promise of frictionless capital movement now looked subject to war risk, sanctions pressure, and the demands of Washington’s regional agenda.

Even the country’s financial markets could not avoid the shock. Gulf stock exchanges swung sharply with each phase of military escalation, while some foreign investors favored a temporary exit from emerging markets and moved toward the dollar, gold, and US bonds. UAE sovereign funds still have enormous capacity to intervene and absorb volatility. 

But the longer tension persists, the more it weakens the country’s appeal as a place where capital can pretend politics does not exist.

Abu Dhabi repositions under pressure

Politically and strategically, the war pushed the UAE toward a broader economic repositioning. Abu Dhabi is now trying to diversify trade and political partnerships faster, from Asia to Africa and Europe, to reduce dependence on an increasingly volatile Gulf environment. 

Competition with Saudi Arabia for international companies, investment, and tourism has also intensified, with each state seeking to prove that it is the more stable and attractive hub.

The UAE withdrawal from OPEC Plus is another major fallout of the war and has deepened tensions with Saudi Arabia. Abu Dhabi invested tens of billions of dollars to raise production capacity to about 5 million barrels per day (bpd). From its perspective, OPEC restrictions limited its ability to maximize revenue at a moment of regional volatility and high energy prices.

The war also exposed a deep contradiction inside the Emirati model. For decades, the UAE marketed stability as a national product. But that product becomes fragile when the chaos moves directly into the Gulf. The state has therefore pursued a dual policy of softening public discussion of the damage while pushing ahead with mega projects in transport, energy, industry, and tourism to send the message that the economy can outlast the war.

Despite these pressures, the UAE has not entered a collapse phase. Oil surpluses and massive sovereign assets have allowed the state to absorb the first shock. Fitch kept the UAE credit rating at AA- with a stable outlook, citing strong overseas assets and higher oil revenues, even as it projected a sharp contraction in Dubai’s economy. 

Essentially, Abu Dhabi can still prop up the system, but the Dubai model is no longer untouchable.

From Gulf broker to Israeli camp

Another implication of war on Iran has seen the UAE double down on the US–Israel axis. Abu Dhabi’s direct involvement in the aggression against Iran triggered a sharper Iranian focus on Emirati interests. It also helped dismantle the appearance of Gulf cohesion. The UAE and Bahrain moved along a harder line, while rival Gulf calculations and a broader regional reordering brought Saudi Arabia, Turkiye, Qatar, and Pakistan into discussions over a new security architecture.

As Saudi–Pakistani rapprochement grew, Abu Dhabi used economic pressure against Islamabad, including demands related to debts and deposits, while deepening ties with India in energy, trade, and strategic corridors. 

The result is the outline of a counteraxis led by the UAE, India, and Israel, with US support. Abu Dhabi’s pressure on Islamabad and its alignment over Somaliland reflect a sharper foreign policy based on regional blocs, economic coercion, and the reshaping of influence maps across West Asia and the Horn of Africa.

Security data and reports suggest that the UAE was among the most exposed Gulf states during the latest escalation, accounting for around 42.8 percent of recorded strikes compared with other Gulf countries. That share reflects a deeper change in the UAE’s regional position. The country is no longer just a commercial hub trying to stand apart from the confrontation around it. Its deeper military and intelligence role has made it part of the confrontation itself, turning political alignment into direct security exposure.

Israeli–Emirati coordination also surfaced through Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s own claim that he secretly visited the UAE and met Emirati President Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan (MbZ) during the war on Iran. Abu Dhabi denied the claim, insisting that its relations with the occupation state are public and conducted through the Abraham Accords. Reuters reported that the meeting took place in Al-Ain on 26 March and lasted several hours.

US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee also revealed that Tel Aviv sent Iron Dome anti-missile batteries to help the UAE confront Iranian attacks, a deployment he described as evidence of the “extraordinary relationship” between the two states.

Other reports linked the escalation to operations attributed to UAE-linked parties against targets inside Iran, including oil facilities, as part of reciprocal responses to Iranian attacks on Emirati infrastructure and vital interests.

Federal strain and domestic tightening

Additionally, the war sharpened fragility inside the UAE’s federal structure. Decision-making is increasingly centralized in Abu Dhabi, while latent disagreements with other emirates, especially Dubai and Sharjah, persist over the nature of the state’s political and economic role and the limits of foreign entanglement. 

This centralization is sensitive because Dubai’s economy rests on openness, trade, and services, while Abu Dhabi’s path is more security-driven and tied to managing regional conflicts. As external involvement expands in pursuit of regional positioning, fears grow over pressure on federal cohesion. 

Internal stability is becoming more tied to the region’s turbulence and less able to remain insulated from it. The dilemma is that Abu Dhabi asks the federation to absorb the costs of a more aggressive regional posture, while Dubai is left to protect the image of neutrality and calm on which its services economy depends. That tension has long existed under the surface, but war pulls it into the open.

This pattern is not limited to internal administration. It also extends through legal tools beyond the UAE’s borders. The state has expanded its use of terrorism lists to include exiled dissidents and entities abroad, with 11 individuals and eight entities added in a 2025 resolution. 

These included dissidents, family members, and foreign-registered companies, often without clear criminal charges or independent judicial oversight. The federal question is therefore no longer just administrative; it is political, economic, and security-driven, as earlier debate over whether the seven emirates function as one state or a project vulnerable to division has shown.

The practice rests on Article 63 of the 2014 Counterterrorism Law and executive decisions such as Cabinet Decision No. 74 of 2020, which allow listing without prior notice or effective appeal safeguards. Previous cases in 2021 involved 38 individuals and 15 entities, showing an upward trend in targeting. At the same time, field reports documented the deportation of around 15,000 Pakistani workers in a short period, including a significant percentage of members of the Shia community, through sudden workplace arrests and opaque procedures that stripped many of their jobs and savings.

During the escalation with Iran, the UAE also tightened control over digital and public space. Authorities warned against circulating content showing attacks, arrested more than 100 people on accusations linked to filming or publishing “inaccurate information,” imposed prior approvals on content creators, and blocked accounts on social media platforms. 

Sources also referred to digital watch lists and the targeting of accounts inside and outside the country. The announcement that networks allegedly linked to Iran and Hezbollah had been dismantled in the name of protecting “financial stability” reflected the same anxiety.

The model after the missiles

The UAE is facing the cost of a regional role that has outrun the image Dubai sells to the world. Abu Dhabi can still draw on oil revenue, sovereign wealth, and western backing to manage the shock, but none of that restores the old promise that the Emirates could sit above the wars around it.

The war on Iran has made that promise harder to sell. Dubai remains open, and Abu Dhabi remains rich. The state still has the resources to absorb pressure. 

Yet the costs are already visible in disrupted flights, higher insurance premiums, tighter security measures, and a growing sense among investors that the UAE is no longer as far removed from regional conflict as it once appeared.