Military | Europe
The Qatar Emir and UAE President Are Meeting Over the Iran War — The Gulf's Quiet Diplomacy
Qatar's Emir and the UAE President are holding direct talks on the Iran war. Here is what the two Gulf leaders are negotiating and why their specific roles are crucial to any ceasefire.
Qatar's Emir and the UAE President are holding direct talks on the Iran war. Here is what the two Gulf leaders are negotiating and why their specific roles are crucial to any ceasefire.
- Qatar's Emir and the UAE President are holding direct talks on the Iran war.
- Al Jazeera's Day 33 coverage of the Iran war confirmed that Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani and UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan held talks on the Iran war 'amid efforts to restore stability...
- For Qatar's specific Iran connection: Qatar has historically maintained a specific working relationship with Iran despite hosting the US military's largest Middle East base (Al Udeid Air Base).
Qatar's Emir and the UAE President are holding direct talks on the Iran war.
Al Jazeera's Day 33 coverage of the Iran war confirmed that Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani and UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan held talks on the Iran war 'amid efforts to restore stability in the Middle East' — the specific diplomatic engagement whose particular combination of Qatar's traditional Iran-facing communication channel and the UAE's specific direct experience of Iranian attacks creates a potentially powerful bilateral mediation resource.
For Qatar's specific Iran connection: Qatar has historically maintained a specific working relationship with Iran despite hosting the US military's largest Middle East base (Al Udeid Air Base). This particular double positioning — American ally and Iranian interlocutor — makes Qatar's specific diplomatic capacity in the current conflict the particular resource that the US has used through the Pakistan back-channel but that Qatari-specific channels could supplement.
For the UAE's specific stake: since the war began, UAE air defences have engaged approximately 500 ballistic missiles, 23 cruise missiles, and 2,100 drones from Iran. Two UAE armed forces members have died, 11 others killed in separate incidents, and over 215 injured. The UAE's particular motivation for a ceasefire — protecting its specific civilian and commercial infrastructure from continued attack — is the most direct in the Gulf.
For the Italian Prime Minister connection: Fortune reported that Giorgia Meloni arrived in Doha on April 4 to meet with Qatar's emir, 'reaffirming the necessity of opening the Strait of Hormuz' — Italy's specific energy security interest whose particular dependence on LNG creates the direct commercial motivation for Italian diplomatic engagement in the Gulf.
For what the Gulf diplomatic cluster achieves: the specific convergence of Qatari communication capacity, UAE direct stake, Italian European interest representation, and the Pakistan back-channel creates the particular multi-vector diplomatic environment whose specific outcomes may be more likely to produce progress than the US-Iran bilateral framework whose direct confrontation makes compromise politically difficult for both sides.