Relations (1)
related 3.00 — strongly supporting 7 facts
The UAE and Lebanon are linked through regional geopolitical dynamics, including the UAE's efforts to contain Iranian influence in Lebanon [1], shared diplomatic stances on regional conflicts {fact:3, fact:7}, and migration patterns involving high-net-worth individuals moving from Lebanon to the UAE [2].
Facts (7)
Sources
Opportunities for Collective Regional Security in the Middle East carnegieendowment.org 4 facts
claimEgypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Türkiye have rejected Israeli plans for the displacement of Palestinians, settlement expansion, and the violation of Lebanese sovereignty.
claimSaudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates sought to contain Iranian regional expansion in Bahrain, Yemen, Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon.
claimThe wars in Gaza and Lebanon, combined with Israel’s rejection of the two-state solution, presented significant challenges to the United Arab Emirates' efforts to consolidate regional and international alliances.
claimEgypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Türkiye have collectively called for an immediate cessation of hostilities in Gaza and Lebanon and an end to all military operations in the region.
Private Wealth Migration 2025 | Press Release - Henley & Partners henleyglobal.com 1 fact
measurementLebanon is expected to see a net outflow of 200 high-net-worth individuals in 2025, with many relocating to Cyprus, Greece, and the UAE.
Iran War: Kinetic, Cyber, Electronic and Psychological Warfare ... resecurity.com 1 fact
claimThe United States advised American citizens to immediately leave Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen due to escalating Iranian strikes and planned US retaliatory strikes.
After the War: Rethinking Regional Security in the Middle ... arab-reform.net 1 fact
claimRegional political dynamics are currently characterized by Saudi-Turkish distrust, relatively recent Egyptian-Turkish normalization, acute Saudi-Emirati rivalry, the fragility of Syria, the weakness of the Lebanese state, and internal rivalries within the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).