Riyadh vs Abu Dhabi: The Gulf’s fiercest rivalry breaks into the open
Once a unified front in West Asia, the Saudi–UAE partnership is unraveling fast. What began as quiet divergence has now burst into open conflict across the region's critical fault lines.
06.01.2026
By Fouad Ibrahim
Source:https://thecradle.co/articles/riyadh-
There have been differences between Saudi Arabia and the UAE for some time, but not
to the point of a full-
The rupture became unmistakable in December 2025, when Saudi Arabia formally demanded
the withdrawal of UAE-
From Yemen to Sudan, Syria, Somalia, and the Red Sea basin, Riyadh and Abu Dhabi are increasingly at odds, backing rival forces and seeking dominance – often at the expense of regional stability.
Diverging paths: How the alliance cracked
For decades, Saudi Arabia and the UAE worked in lockstep. Since the GCC’s formation in 1981, their shared approach to regional security and economic integration masked bigger differences. Their alliance intensified after the 2011 Arab uprisings, when both states sought to crush protest movements and counter the Muslim Brotherhood.
The Saudi-
Riyadh aimed to defeat Ansarallah-
This divergence exploded into the open when the UAE threw its weight behind the separatist Southern Transitional Council (STC), which seeks to partition Yemen by reviving a southern state – directly challenging Saudi insistence on Yemeni unity.
Saudi Arabia's strategic imperatives
Riyadh’s regional posture remains grounded in regime preservation and geopolitical containment. The preservation of territorial unity in Yemen is a key concern, as Saudi rulers fear that southern secessionism could set a dangerous precedent for restive regions within the kingdom.
This anxiety is compounded by the fact that parts of Saudi Arabia’s southern border – such as the provinces of Jizan, Asir, and Najran – are historically Yemeni lands annexed under the 1934 Treaty of Taif, a legacy that remains sensitive in nationalist circles in Sanaa.
Containing Iran remains central, as Riyadh views Ansarallah and the Sanaa government as Iranian proxies and is determined to prevent Tehran from entrenching itself on Saudi Arabia's southern flank. Finally, the kingdom continues to project itself as a leading authority in the Sunni Muslim world, a status that requires resisting the rise of rival spheres of influence.
The UAE's expansive ambitions
Under Emirati President Mohammed bin Zayed (MbZ), the UAE has become far more assertive in its regional posture. Maritime hegemony lies at the heart of its strategy. With limited territorial depth, Abu Dhabi has invested in ports and shipping lanes from the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean, aiming to control chokepoints critical to global trade.
The fight against political Islam is equally central, as the Emirati leadership views the Muslim Brotherhood as an existential threat and has consistently backed secular strongmen and militias to suppress Islamic movements.
In parallel, the UAE has launched an aggressive economic expansion, with state-
Proxy warfare from Syria to the Horn of Africa
This rivalry now plays out across several conflict zones. During the height of the
war in Syria, Riyadh backed extremist Sunni Salafi groups as a counterweight to Iranian
influence. The UAE took a different path. It was among the first to reopen its embassy
in Damascus in 2018, seeking to rehabilitate the government of former Syrian president
Bashar al-
Abu Dhabi also cooperated with Kurdish forces and worked to sideline Islamist factions,
including Hayat Tahrir al-
In Sudan, Riyadh supports General Abdel Fattah al-
In Somalia, both states have carved out rival spheres of influence. Abu Dhabi has
entrenched itself in Somaliland and Puntland, while Riyadh has strengthened ties
with the federal government in Mogadishu. This competition extends across the Red
Sea, where ports and islands have become high-
Yemen: Flashpoint of the Gulf feud
Last month’s Saudi airstrikes on UAE-
This response reveals Riyadh’s growing alarm. Emirati and Israeli entrenchment in southern Yemen and the Horn of Africa now pose a direct threat to Saudi national security and maritime access. The kingdom also views the STC’s separatist project as a dangerous precedent that could reverberate within its own borders.
The strikes signaled that Saudi Arabia would no longer tolerate unchecked Emirati expansion, even at the cost of fracturing GCC unity. Abu Dhabi, however, has stood by its allies, offering only token compromises such as proposals for joint control of key infrastructure.
A rivalry years in the making
Saudi officials were not blindsided by Abu Dhabi's moves. Emirati support for southern separatists was evident by 2017 and intensified in the following years, particularly after the UAE reduced its troop footprint and increased backing for the STC.
Even in the early years of the Yemen war, differences were clear: Riyadh upheld the
unity of Yemen and supported the exiled government, while Abu Dhabi empowered militias
with anti-
The public rupture now reflects the formalization of a long-
Saudi escalation: Red lines without rupture
Despite the rising tensions, a direct military confrontation between the two Persian Gulf monarchies remains unlikely.
Saudi Arabia is prepared to escalate, but will do so through indirect, deniable methods.
Riyadh is expected to double down on political warfare in Yemen, support southern
factions opposed to the STC, conduct limited airstrikes aimed at weakening UAE-
Missile strikes or overt warfare would risk collapsing the Gulf's collective security architecture and invite foreign intervention. Both states are deeply embedded in western security structures, making such outcomes improbable. Instead, Saudi Arabia will seek to assert dominance through calibrated, indirect measures.
Reshaping the region
The consequences of this rupture are already reverberating across the region. Conflicts are being prolonged, humanitarian crises are worsening, and regional institutions are faltering. The GCC, once touted as a pillar of Gulf unity, is becoming increasingly irrelevant. Tel Aviv, meanwhile, has seized the opportunity to expand its presence in maritime chokepoints and volatile zones.
There are three possible trajectories. The two states may reach an informal understanding that manages competition without resolution. A limited reconciliation could emerge, driven by mutual interests in maritime security and regional stability.
Or, the rivalry could escalate into direct confrontations in Yemen or Sudan, with potentially catastrophic fallout for the region and beyond.
What is clear is that this is no longer a personal or ideological falling-
The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of The Cradle.