For decades, a Gulf States strategic shift has been anticipated but never fully realized—until now. The foreign policies of key Arab monarchies, long characterized by a desire to balance the US, Iran, and domestic opinion, are reaching a breaking point. As detailed in a recent analysis by the Jerusalem Strategic Tribune , the era of saying "one thing in Washington, another in Tehran, another in Jerusalem, and another to Arab public opinion has become increasingly difficult to sustain." Why Are Gulf States Maintaining Ties with Iran Despite Security Threats? The primary driver of this impending shift is the perceived threat from the Iranian regime. The article is unequivocal: the confrontation is not with the Iranian people but with "the Revolutionary Guards, the militias, hostage diplomacy, ballistic missiles, nuclear ambitions, and the systematic destabilization of Arab states." Gulf states like Qatar and Oman have maintained ties out of economic necessity or a d...