...e.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 (gas acc...
...ics failure may ignite a revolution. As the result, #Iran might gain a new, dedicated ally within the region.Kuwait: the ruling clans deny it, but Kuwait was part of the former Ottoman Al-Basra province. With the Gulf sealed off, Kuwait’s trade must revert to those ancient overland routes through Basra. At least, it becomes an Iraqi vassal then.Oman: bordering Iran across the Strait, it is paradoxically insulated from the chaos. Its major ports, Duqm and Muscat, lie outside the Persian Gul...
...ounts 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, logist...