This is not a war with
a single objective. It is a multi-layered strategic strike—killing many birds
with one stone.
Publicly, Iran is the target. The stated ambition is to weaken it, isolate
it, and, if possible, reduce it to the kind of humanitarian catastrophe
witnessed in Gaza. But beneath this declared objective lies a far more
calculated design: the weakening of emerging Gulf economic powerhouses that
have, in recent years, begun to rival traditional Western dominance.
Dubai stands out as a prime casualty.
Over the past two decades, it has transformed itself
into a global financial and trading hub, attracting billions of US dollars in
international capital—including from Israel itself. Its strategic ports, Jebel
Ali and Fujairah, have turned it into a critical artery of global commerce.
Such autonomy and influence were never going to fit in comfortably within a
US-led order.
The Abraham Accords, celebrated as a diplomatic breakthrough, also served
another purpose—drawing Dubai deeper into a geopolitical framework that left it
exposed. Once tensions escalated, the emirate found itself in the crosshairs of
a conflict it neither initiated nor could control.
Qatar’s trajectory is equally revealing.
Its earlier isolation within the Gulf Cooperation
Council, combined with the establishment of one of the largest US military
bases in the region, was not an act of strategic generosity. It was a
calculated positioning. Qatar’s vast natural gas reserves and its geographic
proximity to Iran made it indispensable—not as a partner, but as a platform.
What followed was predictable. Iran was provoked into retaliation, and the
Gulf became the unintended—or perhaps intended—battleground. Whether the
destruction in Dubai and Qatar came directly from Iranian strikes or through
more complex channels is almost secondary. The outcome remains the same - both
have been dragged into a war that serves larger strategic ends.
History reinforces this pattern. Since the Iranian
Revolution, the United States has viewed Iran as the principal challenge
to its Middle Eastern dominance. Yet, rather than engaging directly, Washington
has preferred to entangle Tehran in prolonged proxy conflicts across Yemen,
Lebanon, Syria, and Iraq. Decades of sanctions and indirect warfare have failed
to break Iran. If anything, they have hardened it—economically, militarily, and
politically.
The current war reflects a shift born out of frustration. Israel initiated
the confrontation, convinced of its ability to decisively weaken Iran. The
United States, wary yet compelled, has stepped in—not out of readiness, but out
of strategic necessity.
This is not merely a war against Iran. It is a broader attempt to redraw the
region’s economic and geopolitical map—where even allies are expendable, and
collateral damage is quietly folded into grand strategy.






