Gulf states take the fight to Iran as missiles target oil, gas and trade
The UAE, Qatar and others had a plan for staying out of a US-Iran war. It relied on the assumption that Iran would leave them out of it too

Now the Gulf is signalling it has had enough of just absorbing the hits.
None of the six Arab monarchies of the Gulf Cooperation Council wanted this war, analysts say. They had spent months trying to mediate a way out of the confrontation, warning of precisely the kind of regional blowback now unfolding.
The destabilising fallout of “Operation Epic Fury” has badly shaken the GCC’s trust in Washington.
But Iran’s campaign has forced a harder question on Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, Doha and their partners: how long can a purely defensive posture survive a missile barrage?

‘Offensive defensive’
The clearest sign that the Gulf’s posture was shifting came not from a press conference but from an accident.