In this episode of The Middle East Breakdown, Dan Feferman and Hayvi Bouzo are joined by Hussein Abu Bakr Mansour, Egyptian-American writer, analyst, and author of The Abrahamic Metacritic. The conversation unpacks a significant and underreported shift in the Gulf: growing tensions between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, two countries long seen as close strategic allies and partners.
The discussion examines Saudi Arabia's recent pivot—from pulling major media platforms out of UAE hubs like Dubai and relocating them to Riyadh, to diverging positions on South Yemen, Somaliland, Sudan, and even the Palestinian issue. This is not just diplomatic friction. It's a reassertion of power, influence, and regional leadership. The panel explores where Qatar actually fits into this realignment, and how conflicts in South Yemen, Sudan, and the Horn of Africa have become arenas for Gulf competition.
Mansour breaks down the conditions that gave birth to the Abraham Accords framework—the Iranian axis of resistance, US involvement, and Arab Gulf alignment—and explains why those conditions no longer structure regional politics. The episode dives into the asymmetries of power: Israel's military dominance, Qatar's narrative control empire, Turkey's drone industry and regional projection, and the UAE's elite legitimacy versus street-level unpopularity. The conversation tackles uncomfortable questions about ideology, ego, oil prices, fiscal pressures, and whether the Abraham Accords honeymoon is over—or just transforming into something far more complex.
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