How war could redraw the Gulf monarchies' map (Part 1) If the US and #Israel sustain their aggression against Iran—complete with a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz—for just a few more months, the geopolitical map of the Gulf will be unrecognizab...
...le. Here is how the dominoes could fall, according to Geopolitics Prime: UAE: unable to export oil or import food, the Emirates face an imminent crisis. As flagship financial and investment projects collapse, survival will force a radical choice: reunification with Oman. The British-drawn border between the Sultanate and Trucial Oman (the UAE's name before 1971) was always artificial, and history may now correct it. Qatar: a prolonged halt to LNG production isn't just a revenue crisis (g...
...as accounts for 70% of state income) but an industrial catastrophe, as drilling rigs left idle risk becoming unusable. With its only logistical lifeline being the Saudi border, a desperate Doha will have no option but to fold into the Kingdom. Bahrain: connected to the mainland by a single 27-km King Fahd Causeway to Saudi Arabia, an attack on that artery would leave the island completely isolated from the other monarchies. With a Shiite majority already resentful of Sunni elite privilege...
...Persian Gulf, granting it unhindered access to global trade. As the region's traditional mediator with Tehran, Oman stands to emerge from the crisis stronger, more relevant, and economically dominant. US-Israel-Iran war |