However, recent escalations — including coordinated
US–Israeli strikes on Iranian targets in 2025 and 2026, followed by retaliatory
attacks on American installations inside Gulf states — have reignited a
fundamental question: were these bases primarily designed to shield the Gulf
emirates, or to guarantee strategic depth for Israel? Critics argue that the
pattern of engagement suggests a security arrangement in which Gulf territories
function less as protected partners and more as forward operating platforms in
a broader US–Israel strategic calculus. Supporters of the status quo counter
that without American deterrence, Gulf capitals would face far greater
vulnerabilities.
The debate, therefore, is not merely about military
installations; it concerns sovereignty, threat perception, and the true
beneficiaries of regional security alignments. Were Gulf leaders persuaded to
view Iran as the primary existential threat while Israel remained outside their
formal defence calculus? Or is this interpretation an oversimplification of a
far more complex geopolitical reality?
I invite readers to reflect critically:
Are US bases in the Gulf fundamentally defensive shields for Arab monarchies —
or strategic assets designed to preserve Israel’s qualitative military edge?
Has recent regional escalation validated long-standing security assumptions, or
exposed their limitations?
Your considered views will enrich this debate.
