Published in the Jerusalem Post, 12 May 2026
On
May 4 Iran fired 12 ballistic missiles, three cruise missiles, and four drones into
the United Arab Emirates. This latest attack came in response to President Donald
Trump’s effort to ensure free navigation for commercial shipping through the
Strait of Hormuz.
Initially
kept secret, and later disclosed only through limited specialist reporting, is
the interesting information that IDF personnel operated Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile
system to intercept the incoming Iranian missiles, but from within the UAE. Not much has been made of it in the media,
but this was the first time that Israel’s advanced technology has been deployed
and used operationally in combat on foreign soil.
It proves, if proof were needed,
that Israel–UAE military cooperation is a rapidly maturing strategic
partnership. Embedded in the Abraham
Accords framework, the collaboration is driven above all by a shared perception
of the threat posed by Iran.
Early in the war, at the request
of UAE President Mohammed bin Zayed in a direct conversation with Benjamin
Netanyahu, Israel quietly deployed an Iron Dome battery plus IDF personnel to
the UAE. Reports indicate that Israeli
crews have since intercepted dozens of Iranian missiles and drones aimed at UAE
targets.
In
parallel, the IAF carried out strikes on short‑range missile launch sites in
Iran that were assessed as threats to the UAE and other Gulf states, linking
Israeli offensive operations directly to Emirati defense.
Yet
even before the current Iran war, there was a clear trend of growing military
and defense‑industrial cooperation between Israel and the UAE.
It was back in August 2025 that the Washington Institute for Near East Policy published a survey titled: “Israel-UAE Defense Cooperation Grows under the Abraham Accords”. It included reference to a possible forthcoming deal in which the UAE’s Edge Group would procure the Hermes 900 unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) from the Israeli company Elbit Systems—including transfer of technology and localized production.
That would, it said, potentially shift "the geopolitical balance in the Gulf.” If this deal was indeed finalized, it has not, on the grounds of industrial confidentiality, been made public. Reports have appeared, though, of multi-million dollar sales of the Hermes UAV to undisclosed customers.What is known is that since
normalization in 2020, the UAE has acquired Israeli‑made Barak and Spyder air‑defense
systems, embedding Israeli technology in its force structure. In October 2022 an Israeli‑made Barak system
was deployed in the UAE, and by 2023 the two states conducted their first
bilateral naval exercise and unveiled a jointly developed unmanned surface
vessel.
In 2025, UAE Mirage 2000‑9s flew
alongside Israeli and US aircraft in a multinational exercise in Greece,
signaling that Emirati participation in exercises that openly include Israel
has become routine.
Put together with the deployment
of an Iron Dome system within the UAE itself, what emerges, if not quite a
mutual defense treaty, is close
to the collaboration expected in a signed and
sealed security partnership.
Way back in 2017, three years before the Abraham Accords, a senior UAE military figure publicly described the UAE and Israel as “like brothers”. In an interview with the US outlet Defense & Aerospace Report, UAE Major General Abdullah al‑Hashmi went on to describe the US as the “older brother”, overseeing any differences between them.
So can Israel and the UAE fairly
be called “brothers‑in‑arms”?
Israeli and Emirati forces have
now fought on the same side in the same live theatre, with Israelis directly
defending Emirati territory from Iranian attack and coordinating offensive
action against Iranian launch sites. The UAE hosts and operates
Israeli air‑defense and early‑warning systems and trains regularly with Israeli
forces, which is the kind of shoulder‑to‑shoulder activity many would
intuitively associate with “brothers‑in‑arms”.
The cooperation,
though, is framed around the specific threat posed by Iran. There is no
formal or explicit public commitment that either state would come to the
other’s aid in future conflicts. Above all, the relationship remains constrained
by wider Arab public opinion, and the UAE’s need to preserve maneuvering room
with other regional actors.
All the same Israel and the
UAE have crossed a previously unbridgeable Rubicon. Israeli troops,
Iron Dome, and even – it is reliably reported – state-of-the=-art Israeli prototype
Iron Beam and Spectro systems have been deployed in combat from Emirati soil,
with real‑time Israeli intelligence guiding UAE and coalition responses.
All of which makes it politically and operationally easier, next time, to
set up joint structures previously almost unimaginable – the permanent basing outside
of Israel of some Israeli systems, joint missile‑defense planning, and
regularized trilateral planning with US Central Command.
In fact that model is
already beginning to appear, in uneven ways, across the Abraham Accords
bloc. It could, if the war drags on, become the basis of a looser
regional security architecture focused on Iran and its projectiles rather than
on broader Arab–Israeli peace.
Among the Abraham Accords states,
the UAE and Bahrain are emerging as front‑line adopters of the new
model. They openly normalize with Israel, quietly integrate Israeli air‑
and missile‑defense, intelligence, and naval cooperation, and plug this into US‑led
multilateral drills and emerging regional defense schemes aimed squarely at
Iran and its projectiles.
By contrast,
Morocco - and Sudan before the civil war -
were “selective adopters”, taking Israeli UAVs, air‑defense
systems, intelligence and doctrine sharing, but applying them primarily to
their own local rivalries like Algeria and Western Sahara.
Introduced in the US Senate in
March 2026 was an Abraham Accords Defense Cooperation Act. If
passed it would create a formal Pentagon‑run “US–Abraham Accords Defense
Cooperation Initiative”, deepening military cooperation with Abraham Accords
countries specifically to deter Iran and its proxies.
The Bill is still at the very start of the legislative process, but commentators believe that current political dynamics in Congress give it a real—though by no means guaranteed—chance of being folded into this year’s annual US defense Bill.
So a possible outcome
of this Israel-UAE “brothers-in-arms” moment is a US‑enabled security ecosystem
in which Israel and the UAE collaborate closely when Iran is the adversary, and
other Accords states plug in more selectively – in short, a tighter, closer,
more secure partnership.
Published in the Jerusalem Post, and the Jerusalem Post online titled: "Israel and UAE: A brothers-in-arms alliance against Iran's growing threat", 12 May 2026:
https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-895776









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