ASIATODAY.ID, JAKARTA – Tensions between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have surged back to a boiling point, as the two Gulf heavyweights engage in an increasingly open and aggressive media confrontation, raising fears of a new geopolitical rift in the heart of the Middle East.
The latest escalation follows a sustained media campaign by Saudi outlets targeting the UAE, described by analysts as the most serious dispute between the two allies in years. The feud has triggered concerns over potential spillover effects on regional stability and key financial hubs in the Gulf.
Harsh accusations—ranging from alleged human rights abuses to political betrayal—have circulated for weeks across state-linked media and social platforms.
The tensions intensified after a brief conflict in Yemen, where Saudi airstrikes reportedly pushed back separatist forces backed by the UAE.
Saudi state television Al-Ekhbariya went as far as accusing Abu Dhabi of fueling instability across multiple conflict zones.
“The UAE is investing in chaos and supporting separatists from Libya to Yemen and the Horn of Africa,” the channel claimed in a recent broadcast on Sunday, January 25, 2026.
Such blunt rhetoric is highly unusual in the Gulf, particularly given that Saudi Arabia and the UAE previously stood shoulder to shoulder during the 2017 diplomatic and trade blockade against Qatar.
At the time, internal disagreements were kept largely behind closed doors to preserve the image of Gulf unity.
That restraint now appears to be eroding.
Gulf security analyst Anna Jacobs said the public nature of the dispute signals a deeper shift in regional dynamics.
“Gulf monarchies typically work hard to project calm and stability. What we are seeing now is the surfacing of long-standing frictions in a way that is unprecedented,” she said.
Jacobs noted that the media and social media attacks echo memories of the last major Gulf rift, warning that Riyadh is now openly challenging Abu Dhabi’s regional policies with no clear signs of de-escalation.
Meanwhile, Abu Dhabi has largely remained silent. The UAE has yet to issue an official response to the Saudi accusations. Emirati political scientist Abdulkhaleq Abdulla suggested the silence is deliberate.
“The UAE is not accustomed to provoking its brothers,” he said.
While the dispute has not yet crossed into direct military confrontation, the escalating war of words has sparked a critical question among observers: is this merely a media and diplomatic clash, or the early stage of a deeper strategic rupture in the Gulf?
What is certain is that when two of the Middle East’s most influential powers trade accusations in public, the long-assumed stability of the Gulf can no longer be taken for granted. (AT Network)
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