BRUSSELS—The United States’ relationship with its European allies took center stage at the recent NATO Summit in Ankara, as US President Donald Trump shifted between criticizing and praising European allies. Yet the presence at the summit of leaders from another region spoke to how a different, if less visible, relationship is developing in important ways.
Increasingly, Gulf security and Euro-Atlantic security are fused to the extent that it is difficult to explain one without the impacts on the other. As leaders from Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates—participants in the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative—gathered in Ankara for the NATO Summit, the central question was not whether the Gulf would move away from Washington following the Iran war. Instead, it was how Gulf countries would address growing security gaps while maintaining the United States as the core of their security architecture.
The war with Iran and the continued stalemate in the Strait of Hormuz, which shows no signs of resolution amid this week’s escalation in fighting, have accelerated a trend that was already underway: The Gulf, Europe, and NATO allies are deepening their cooperation. It’s easy to understand why, as Europe’s stability and energy security are increasingly tied to the Gulf, while Gulf states are looking to diversify, not replace, their security partnerships as they pursue a more assertive strategy of multi-alignment.
Some observers have argued that Gulf states might increasingly pull away from the United States, since they have suffered the worst of Iranian retaliation during the war. The Ankara summit points to an alternative outcome—less a departure from US centrality in the Gulf’s security architecture and more the emergence of a new security equation: US protection remains at the core but is supplemented by stronger cooperation with Europe, Turkey, and other middle-power partners. For Gulf states, the aim of this new equation is to address the vulnerabilities and gaps in infrastructure protection and maritime security that were exposed by the war with Iran.
A multi-alignment strategy
Gulf states are pursuing an assertive multi-alignment strategy with partners from Europe, Turkey, Ukraine, South Korea, and Pakistan because it is practical: capabilities and hardware arrive faster, financial terms are less complex, and they rapidly fill the security gaps the Iran war exposed. These include counter-drone systems, training, maritime security, critical infrastructure protection, and other technology-sharing arrangements that can fill the gaps where US systems take too long, are too costly, or where technology sharing is prohibited.
Europe’s big opening in the Gulf after the war can be understood in this context. European proposals and concrete tracks for cooperation are gaining traction when they come with financing, technical expertise, and concrete defense deliverables.
The same logic has applied to other middle powers rising in the Gulf. Ukraine’s hard-won counter-drone expertise against the same Iranian drone technology used by Russia has acted as a real force multiplier for the Gulf’s defense posture. Kyiv has deployed two hundred counter drone specialists across the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar, signed ten-year defense agreements with all three, and offered inexpensive interceptors against Iranian drones that Gulf states were previously downing with four-million-dollar Patriot missiles. South Korea’s Cheongung-II air defense system recorded its first combat intercept defending the UAE, and Seoul provided replacement interceptors within days. Pakistan’s manpower and 2025 mutual defense pact with Saudi Arabia brings an ambiguous form of extended deterrence. And Turkey’s massively produced and lower-cost defense systems fill gaps where Washington may be too slow or restricts its technology transfer, including counter-drone systems purchased by Saudi Arabia and Qatar during the war. All of these point to the same goal: Gulf multi-alignment is about assembling a wider network of different capabilities and partners to meet both urgent and long-term needs.
This argument echoes what I heard at a recent dialogue the Atlantic Council convened in Brussels with Germany’s Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung think tank, the UAE’s Anwar Gargash Diplomatic Academy, and Saudi Arabia’s Prince Saud Al-Faisal Institute for Diplomatic Studies. The urgency of bringing Gulf security and Euro-Atlantic security into the same conversation reflected a growing recognition that trade routes, energy security, drone threats, and regional crises now connect the Gulf, Europe, and the Eastern Mediterranean more directly than before. The message was not that the Gulf is realigning away from Washington, but that overreliance on the United States alone has become too risky and too slow for the pace of regional threats.
The war also showed that other partners were not able to deliver. China could not capitalize despite its economic weight in the Gulf, and the Iran war exposed the limits of its security and diplomatic relevance at a moment of crisis. Russia also did little to press Iran to halt attacks on Gulf partners while aligning closer with Tehran. The war acted as a sorting mechanism, and Gulf multi-alignment in this case was not indiscriminate, but rather a well-calculated selection of partners who can deliver.
But despite the multi-alignment push, if anything, the war strengthened the US position and the reality that no other country can provide the same level of deterrence, logistics, crisis response, and security protection to the Gulf. Despite frustrations with US restrictions, delays, or changing political priorities between administrations, Gulf states will still see Washington as the core of the Gulf security architecture.
Gap-filling without fragmentation
The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) is not emerging from the war as a more cohesive and united bloc. If anything, the environment under the US-Iran memorandum of understanding and on-and-off fighting may sharpen intra-Gulf tensions that were already on the rise before the conflict, including Saudi-UAE tensions. This matters because Gulf states are unlikely to address their security gaps through a unified GCC framework. Rather, GCC states will continue diversifying their regional and foreign policies at different speeds, often via quicker bilateral agreements that may advance one state’s interests at the expense of another’s.
NATO allies can be expected to show greater willingness to help the United States with the burden of securing the Gulf. With Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates represented at the NATO Summit, maritime security, counter-drone measures, and defense investment are likely to remain center stage in country-to-country deals.
This is why the Middle East, the Gulf, the Eastern Mediterranean, and the future of the US role in European and Gulf security can no longer be dealt with in silos. Trade routes, energy security, drone and missile threats, and regional crises are increasingly interconnected.
Facts Only
* US President Donald Trump shifted between criticizing and praising European allies at the NATO Summit in Ankara.
* Leaders from Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates participated in the NATO Summit in Ankara.
* The central question for Gulf leaders was addressing security gaps while maintaining the United States as the core of their security architecture.
* The war with Iran and the stalemate in the Strait of Hormuz accelerated cooperation among the Gulf, Europe, and NATO allies.
* Gulf states are pursuing a multi-alignment strategy with partners from Europe, Turkey, Ukraine, South Korea, and Pakistan.
* This strategy involves sharing capabilities in areas like counter-drone systems, maritime security, and critical infrastructure protection.
* Ukraine's counter-drone expertise was deployed across the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar.
* South Korea provided air defense system components to the UAE.
* Pakistan’s 2025 mutual defense pact with Saudi Arabia is mentioned.
* The security issues connecting trade routes, energy security, drone threats, and regional crises link the Gulf, Europe, and the Eastern Mediterranean.
Executive Summary
US-European relations were mixed during the NATO Summit in Ankara, with US President Donald Trump exhibiting fluctuating stances toward European allies. The gathering of leaders from Gulf nations—Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and the UAE—indicated a developing fusion between Gulf security and Euro-Atlantic security. The central focus for Gulf participants was managing security gaps while maintaining the US role as the core of their security architecture, rather than determining Gulf alignment with Washington following the Iran war.
The conflict with Iran and the stalemate in the Strait of Hormuz have accelerated cooperation among the Gulf, Europe, and NATO allies due to interconnected energy security and stability concerns. While some observed potential pull-away from the United States due to suffering Iranian retaliation, the summit suggested an alternative outcome: US centrality remains but is supplemented by stronger cooperation with Europe, Turkey, and other middle powers. This shift reflects a search for solutions to infrastructure protection and maritime security vulnerabilities exposed by the conflict.
Gulf states are pursuing a multi-alignment strategy involving partners like Europe, Turkey, Ukraine, South Korea, and Pakistan to access faster capabilities and less complex financial terms, addressing security gaps in areas like counter-drone systems and critical infrastructure. This dynamic is supported by tangible security cooperation, where expertise from other regions has filled specific defense needs, such as Ukrainian counter-drone technology being deployed in the Gulf. Despite this diversification, the United States remains central to the Gulf security architecture, as other partners could not provide equivalent deterrence or crisis response capabilities.
Full Take
The narrative presents a dynamic tension between perceived US centrality in the Gulf security structure and the emerging reality of multipolar security architecture. The argument shifts from a potential divergence away from Washington to an integration where US protection is supplemented by a broader network of partnerships. This shift is driven less by ideological rejection and more by pragmatic necessity—the need to address acute, immediate vulnerabilities exposed by regional conflict.
The core pattern observable is the operationalization of security needs through transactional alignment. Gulf states are not abandoning the US core but are strategically diversifying external dependencies to acquire specific technical or logistical capabilities that are faster or more cost-effective than relying solely on Washington's capacity. This challenges the monolithic view of great power alignment by showing how non-traditional partners—like those providing counter-drone expertise—become critical force multipliers in regional security calculus.
The implication for cognitive sovereignty lies in recognizing that security architecture is no longer a singular, top-down framework but a composite system built on layered agreements and overlapping responsibilities. The increased focus on bilateral deals over unified blocs suggests an agency shift among Gulf states: moving from being passive recipients of US strategy to active architects capable of synthesizing disparate sources into functional security solutions. The risk lies in the potential for these rapid, tailored arrangements to create fragmented dependencies rather than true sovereignty if not managed with clear long-term strategic coherence.
Bridge Questions: How will the varying speeds and priorities of bilateral agreements affect the stability of the broader GCC framework? What mechanisms are necessary to ensure that multi-alignment does not lead to a dispersal of security commitments across competing interests? If Gulf states successfully leverage non-US partners for specific gaps, how will this redefine the scope and limits of future US engagement in the region?
Sentinel — Human
The text functions as sophisticated geopolitical analysis, weaving together specific security incidents with broader trends in Gulf and Euro-Atlantic security cooperation, exhibiting a high degree of human analytical structuring.
