Strategic divergence widens as Gulf economies weigh the cost of conflict over the logic of confrontation
The suggestion by Donald Trump that Arab countries should help finance the war against Iran reflects a familiar instinct in Washington: externalize the financial burden while retaining strategic command. Yet, this proposition is increasingly at odds with shifting regional priorities.
According to
White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt, the idea is not merely rhetorical
but rooted in the President’s thinking. This comes at a time when Washington
claims that negotiations with Tehran are progressing, even as it threatens to
target Iran’s energy infrastructure. Such dual signaling—diplomacy on one hand
and coercion on the other—highlights a policy struggling to reconcile intent
with outcome.
For decades,
the United States has framed Iran as the principal destabilizing force in the
region, often in strategic alignment with Israel. That narrative is no longer
universally compelling across Arab capitals. The issue is not the absence of
concern about Iran, but the rising cost of confrontation.
Three realities now shape the regional
calculus.
First, the
ongoing conflict is widely perceived as emerging from a convergence of
US-Israeli strategic interests, despite visible unease among several Gulf
states. This perception complicates efforts to build financial or political
backing for prolonged military engagement.
Second, the
credibility of US security guarantees has come under scrutiny. Strategic
installations in countries hosting American bases have faced vulnerabilities,
raising questions about the reliability of external protection. If security
assurances appear uncertain, underwriting conflict becomes a harder sell domestically.
Third, and
most decisively, the economic fallout is being borne disproportionately by Arab
economies. The disruption of the Strait of Hormuz—a critical artery for global
oil shipments—has directly impacted revenues, trade flows, and fiscal stability
across the Gulf. For these states, the war is not an abstract geopolitical
contest but an immediate economic strain.
Even within Washington, strategic clarity remains
elusive. While Trump speaks in terms of near-accomplished “regime change,”
Marco Rubio has cautioned that outcomes remain uncertain. This internal
divergence weakens the case for burden-sharing and raises concerns about
long-term policy direction.
The emerging
divide is therefore subtle but significant. Arab states are not dismissing
security concerns, but they are increasingly prioritizing economic stability
and regional de-escalation over alignment with an open-ended conflict.
In this evolving landscape, one reality stands
out: while Washington may seek partners to fund its war, Arab states—already
counting the losses—are far less inclined to underwrite it.






