Monday, 18 May 2026

Game Spoilers in the Gulf Conflict

As the confrontation between the United States and Iran drags on without a decisive outcome, the risk of “game spoilers” entering the conflict appears to be increasing. In every prolonged geopolitical crisis, there are actors that benefit not from peace, but from deeper mistrust, wider confrontation, and permanent instability.

Recent attacks on the UAE and Saudi Arabia have once again intensified regional tensions. Predictably, fingers were pointed towards Iran. Yet the opaque nature of modern hybrid warfare makes definitive attribution increasingly difficult. Drone strikes, sabotage operations, and covert attacks are often designed to create confusion before facts fully emerge.

This raises an uncomfortable but important question: does Iran genuinely benefit from escalating hostilities with Gulf Arab states at this particular moment?

The answer is far from straightforward.

The UAE, particularly Dubai, depends heavily on regional stability to sustain its position as a financial, logistics, and commercial hub. Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 also requires calm energy markets and investor confidence. Iran, meanwhile, urgently needs uninterrupted oil exports — especially shipments destined for China — to stabilize its sanction-hit economy. A prolonged disruption in the Strait of Hormuz would damage Tehran as much as its Arab neighbors.

If all major regional players need stable oil flows, then who benefits from widening the Arab-Iranian divide?

This is where the possibility of “game spoilers” deserves attention. Any gradual rapprochement between Gulf capitals and Tehran could reduce regional polarization, weaken dependence on external security arrangements, and create new economic alignments across the Middle East. Such an outcome may not suit every strategic actor involved in the region.

History shows that Middle Eastern conflicts are rarely shaped solely by declared combatants. Proxy warfare, covert operations, intelligence manipulation, and narrative management have long remained part of the geopolitical landscape.

None of this proves the existence of a hidden hand behind recent attacks. However, dismissing the possibility entirely may also be naive. In today’s Middle East, perception itself has become a weapon.

The real danger may not only be missiles and drones, but the invisible forces attempting to ensure that Arabs and Iranians remain locked in perpetual suspicion and confrontation.

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