Saudi-UAE rivalry explodes into view after strike in war-torn Yemen

Saudi-UAE rivalry explodes into view after strike in war-torn Yemen


For years, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia projected geopolitical and economic power across the Gulf and beyond, seemingly in tandem.

But a growing rivalry and struggle for influence has come to a head – most recently in Yemen – following years of divergence over a tangle of competing interests that reach from regional waterways to the corridors of power in Washington, analysts say.

The once-close relationship between Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan was long seen as the backbone of the alliance between the two Gulf powers.

But as their ambitions grew apart and Salman accelerated sweeping economic reforms at home while reasserting Saudi dominance abroad, talk has swirled of a rift with the Emirati leader, previously considered his mentor.

A convoy of armoured vehicles in the port city Mukalla, southern Yemen, on January 1. Separatists from Yemen’s Southern Transitional Council said that Saudi-aligned government forces would enter territories seized by the UAE-backed group. Photo: AFP
A convoy of armoured vehicles in the port city Mukalla, southern Yemen, on January 1. Separatists from Yemen’s Southern Transitional Council said that Saudi-aligned government forces would enter territories seized by the UAE-backed group. Photo: AFP

Now the pair find themselves on opposing sides over oil production and in Sudan, the Horn of Africa and now Yemen, where the two countries are part of an anti-Houthi military coalition but support rival factions within the internationally recognised government.

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