The Gulf may have just crossed into its most dangerous phase yet. Missiles in the sky. Oil zones in flames. And Arab capitals suddenly confronting a question they never thought they would have to ask: is the UAE now directly in Iran’s crosshairs? The region has witnessed a dramatic escalation. The UAE says its air defenses were activated against incoming Iranian missiles and drones. Fujairah, one of the Gulf’s most critical oil hubs, was suddenly engulfed in flames after a mysterious strike. And at the center of the crisis sits a pipeline that may matter more than the Strait of Hormuz itself. Because this was not just any target. Reports suggest the attacks focused on the UAE’s key oil bypass route, infrastructure specifically designed to reduce dependence on Hormuz and weaken Tehran’s leverage over Gulf shipping. Iran denies responsibility. Abu Dhabi blames Tehran. Tehran blames Trump’s “adventurism.” And somewhere in the middle of the accusations lies a larger geopolitical battle over oil, pressure, and control of the Gulf. But this crisis did not emerge in isolation. The UAE had already exited OPEC+, increased oil ambitions, and moved closer to Washington. Now, analysts are asking whether those moves unintentionally painted a target on Abu Dhabi at the worst possible moment. As drones, tankers, pipelines, and warships become part of the same battlefield, one thing is becoming clear: this is no longer just a Hormuz crisis. It is a fight over who controls the future flow of global energy.
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