Updated
Updated · NPR · Jun 19
Gulf States Question U.S. Reliability After Iran War Hit Bases and Infrastructure
Updated
Updated · NPR · Jun 19

Gulf States Question U.S. Reliability After Iran War Hit Bases and Infrastructure

3 articles · Updated · NPR · Jun 19

Summary

  • Gulf leaders are reassessing the value of hosting U.S. bases after months of Iranian drone and missile attacks hit infrastructure, hotels, oil and gas facilities, with American bases among the main targets.
  • Dania Thafer said U.S. defense technology still helped Gulf states withstand the attacks, and leaders continue to see Washington as their most important security partner despite growing doubts about its reliability.
  • That skepticism has deepened because Gulf states were exposed to retaliation from a war launched by the U.S. and Israel, while debate grows over whether advanced defense systems matter more than permanent U.S. bases.
  • Trump's retreat from eliminating Iran's short-range ballistic missiles has added to Gulf disappointment, Thafer said, because those weapons threatened the region and the Strait of Hormuz remains central to its economic security.
  • With Europe hesitant, China minimally involved and Russia seen as aiding Iran with intelligence, Gulf capitals still view the U.S. as the best available option among weak alternatives.

Insights

Why is the new U.S.-Iran peace deal being called a 'capitulation' that leaves key allies vulnerable?
After devastating attacks, are U.S. military bases in the Gulf now a liability instead of a shield?
As Gulf nations seek new allies, who will fill the power vacuum left by a retreating America?