Stop and think about that for a second.
The UAE never fired a single missile at Iran. Not one.
The UAE explicitly banned the use of its territory and airspace for attacks on Iran. They even maintained a quiet diplomatic understanding with Tehran for years.
And Iran hit it harder than Israel.
By Day 13 of the war, Iran had launched 314 ballistic missiles, 15 cruise missiles and 1,672 drones at the UAE alone.
Over half of all Iranian projectiles fired at Gulf countries were directed at the UAE.
More than 3,000 missiles and drones total — aimed at a country that had nothing to do with starting this war.
Why?
The answer is not military. It is financial.
And once you understand it, this entire war looks completely different.
Here is what Iran is actually targeting.
In May 2025, President Trump flew to the Gulf for what became the most economically significant presidential trip in modern history.
✅Saudi Arabia: $600 billion committed to the United States.
✅Qatar: $1.2 trillion economic agreement.
✅UAE: $1.4 trillion 10-year investment framework — focused on AI, frontier technology, semiconductors, energy and manufacturing.
Total: over $2 trillion in Gulf investment pledged to America.
And the UAE's $1.4 trillion commitment alone equals roughly 30% of its entire GDP.
That is a country betting its entire economic future on the United States.
✅Trump also greenlit 500,000 of Nvidia's most advanced AI chips annually to the UAE.
✅Microsoft committed $15 billion.
✅Amazon, Google and every major US tech company was building data centers in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.
The UAE was not just an oil state. It was becoming the AI capital of the Middle East.
The financial hub between East and West. The model for what a modern Arab economy looks like.
And that model was built entirely in partnership with America.
ADNOC's CEO — the chief executive of Abu Dhabi's national oil company called Iran's strikes on UAE energy infrastructure "global economic warfare."
Not military warfare. Economic warfare.
Iran targeted the Ruwais refinery, the largest refinery in the Middle East.
Iran targeted Jebel Ali port, the commercial artery serving three billion people across a 3,500 kilometer radius.
Iran targeted Dubai International Airport, one of the busiest in the world.
Iran hit an Amazon data center, disrupting cloud services across the region.
These are not military targets. These are the infrastructure of a $1.4 trillion US-UAE economic partnership.
.
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Here is my analysis as someone who has studied money and power for 50 years.
Iran cannot beat America militarily. That is not even a question.
But Iran understands something most people don't.
The most powerful weapon in the world is not a missile.
It is economic pain.
Iran's strategy is brutally simple and brutally elegant.
The UAE is where the money lives. It is where American tech companies built their Gulf headquarters.
Where American AI infrastructure is being installed. Where the $1.4 trillion commitment is supposed to flow.
Destroy that. Make it uninsurable. Make it uninvestable. Make every CEO in Silicon Valley ask: should we really be building our data centers in a war zone?
If that works the $1.4 trillion deal collapses.
American tech companies pull out. The UAE model fails.
And the message to every other Arab country contemplating deep partnership with America is: look what happened to Dubai.
That is the target.
Not Israel. Not American soldiers. The economic architecture binding America and the Gulf together.
My rich dad taught me one of the most important lessons in warfare and business.
He said: "Never fight your enemy where they are strong. Attack where they are exposed."
America's military is invincible. Iran knows this.
But America's economy? Its gas prices? Its stock market? Its technology partnerships?
Those are exposed.
And the UAE as America's most committed economic partner in the region, the anchor of a $2 trillion Gulf investment strategy is where Iran found the exposure.
The Iranian IRGC itself confirmed this when they said they were using 60% of their firepower against US "strategic interests" in neighboring Arab countries.
Not military bases. Strategic interests.
The war in Iran is not just a military conflict.
It is the most sophisticated economic attack on American financial architecture since the 1973 oil embargo.
Now, that doesn't mean partnerships will fall through or the trust will go. It's not that easy.
This is just Iran's strategy & that's how they're re-positioning this war.
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