After its 45th annual meeting in December 2024, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) seemed more united than in decades. This was no small feat just three years after the conclusion of the Gulf rift that brought Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Qatar to the brink of armed conflict. Today, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and the UAE are keen to project good relations, vast potential for collaboration, and stability. However, more competitive intentions lurk beneath the surface of such apparent unity, especially between Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Qatar. As political concerns shift from the Arab Uprisings-induced civil wars and political crises to economic development and international connections, the major Gulf economies find themselves in a fierce rivalry with each other. Understanding where their perspectives on various armed conflicts, national development and regional prosperity coincide and where they diverge is vital to identify how their balance between competition and collaboration may work out, with ensuing consequences for the stability of the Middle East as the European Union (EU)’s immediate neighbour.
About the Author
Máté Szalai is a Research Fellow at the Conflict Research Unit of Clingendael.