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Analysis-Gulf recalibrates as Iran emerges intact from war

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on June 15, 2026

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· Last updated: June 15, 2026

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Gulf States Recalibrate Strategy as Iran Remains a Potent Force After War

By Samia Nakhoul

Regional Power Dynamics and the Aftermath of the U.S.-Iran Deal

BEIRUT, June 15 (Reuters) - The U.S.-Iran deal may silence the guns, but it cannot alter the verdict of more than three months of war.

The region has emerged from one of its most dangerous crises in decades with the balance of power broadly unchanged, Iran politically emboldened, and Gulf confidence in U.S. protection deeply shaken, Gulf sources, diplomats and analysts say.

Iran remains a formidable and undefeated force capable of threatening Gulf Arab states and global energy flows, they say, while the United States has again revealed the limits of military power against a resilient adversary.

For Washington, the deal offers an exit from a costly confrontation that failed to deliver its most ambitious objectives -- from forcing Tehran’s capitulation to dismantling its nuclear and missile capabilities, the sources add. For Iran, it amounts to something equally significant: survival.

After absorbing relentless U.S. and Israeli strikes, the Islamic Republic emerges battered but standing, preserving both its political establishment and much of the leverage that brought the parties to the table.

U.S.-Israeli Campaign and its Fallout

“‘Epic Fury’ has been an epic disaster,” said Aaron David Miller, a former U.S. official and negotiator, referring to the U.S.-Israeli campaign launched on Iran on February 28 that killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and top officials.

Shock to Sunni Gulf States

The Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), to be signed on Friday, provides for a 60-day cessation of hostilities during which the two sides will negotiate a permanent settlement, including disputes over Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile.

The sharpest shock, however, is being felt in the Sunni Arab Gulf states, where the stability behind decades of economic growth has been sharply challenged. By this measure, they are the war's main losers: spectators to decisions that reshaped their security landscape, now left to absorb the fallout.

The deal, Gulf sources say, has already begun to reshape Gulf strategic thinking, eroding confidence in U.S. protection, entrenching Iran as an enduring regional force, and accelerating a shift toward accommodation rather than confrontation.

A senior Gulf government source put it bluntly: any de-escalation is positive, but the situation is unequivocally worse than before the war.

Israeli Perspective on the Deal

The emerging deal also appears unfavourable to Israel, according to three Israeli officials, as it omits its core demands, including dismantling Iran’s enrichment capability and curbs on its missile programme.

Officials said Israel was caught off guard when U.S. President Donald Trump signalled on Thursday that a deal was close, highlighting its limited influence over the terms. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu raised the issue directly with Trump, according to a statement from his office, which stressed that Israel was not party to the agreement and outlined its conditions for a final deal -- ending Iran's nuclear ambitions.

Far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir rejected the deal, saying Israel was not bound by it "in any way."

Gulf Capitals Shift Towards Engagement with Tehran

The agreement may end this phase of the conflict, Gulf sources say, but it does not resolve the strategic dilemma it has exposed: Iran remains a potent force, the Strait of Hormuz has emerged as a recurring pressure point, and the assumptions underpinning Gulf economies look more fragile than at any point in recent memory.

For Gulf states, the U.S.-Israeli campaign has triggered precisely the consequences they had long feared: Iranian strikes on energy and civilian infrastructure and disruption to Hormuz, dealing a heavy economic blow.

Gulf capitals may welcome a pause in fighting, but many are drawing a sobering conclusion: neither U.S. nor Israeli force has removed the Iranian challenge, while the costs of confrontation have fallen disproportionately on those caught in between.

Reassessment of Security Alliances

“More and more Gulf states are coming to realise that Iran is here to stay, that it retains the capacity to disrupt the regional order,” said Middle East scholar Fawaz Gerges.

“The Gulf states don’t trust Iran. They had hoped the United States would bring about regime change. The reverse has happened,” Gerges said. “Now more and more Gulf rulers realise they cannot depend on the U.S., or Israel to deliver security or stability.”

That reassessment marks a deeper shift. Gulf states have long distrusted Iran but relied on U.S. power to contain it. Now, engagement with Tehran has already begun.

Intensified Diplomatic Contacts

Gulf capitals have intensified contacts with Tehran lately, seeking economic and security understandings to reduce the risk of confrontation, regional sources say.

Before the war, the central regional question was the scope of Arab–Israeli normalisation, Gerges said. In its aftermath, the focus is shifting toward Gulf-Iran accommodation.

While Washington will remain an indispensable partner, regional analysts say the conflict is likely to accelerate a quiet but consequential realignment, with Gulf states diversifying defence ties and hedging against future shocks.

Washington's Objectives Missed

Saudi analyst Abdulaziz Sager is more explicit. In his view, Washington has failed to deliver its declared objectives from regime change to curbing Iran’s nuclear program, while handing Tehran two new points of strategic leverage -- the weaponisation of Hormuz and the ability to directly threaten Gulf states.

"They (the Americans) switched from unconditional surrender to an MOU. They caved in," said Sager, Chairman of the Saudi-based Gulf Research Center. "They said they would change the Iranian regime -- they couldn’t. They said they would resolve the missile and nuclear file -- that didn’t happen.”

What is being signed, analysts s

Key Takeaways

  • The 60‑day ceasefire MoU opens a negotiation window and aims to resume blocked energy flows via the Strait of Hormuz (axios.com)
  • Gulf Arab confidence in U.S. military protection is shaken, prompting strategic recalibration toward accommodating Iran (orfonline.org)
  • Despite Operation Epic Fury targeting Iran’s leadership and nuclear infrastructure, Iran remains politically resilient and capability intact, undermining U.S. objectives (csis.org)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

How has the US-Iran deal affected Gulf state security?
The deal has eroded Gulf confidence in US protection, leaving Gulf states to reassess their security strategies as Iran remains a potent regional force.
What has been the outcome for Iran after the conflict?
Iran emerges battered but undefeated, politically emboldened, and with much of its leverage intact, despite enduring strikes from the US and Israel.
How are Gulf states responding to the new balance of power?
Gulf states are shifting towards engagement and accommodation with Iran, moving away from reliance on US military protection.
What are the economic implications for the Gulf after the conflict?
The war disrupted energy infrastructure and the Strait of Hormuz, causing economic blows and highlighting vulnerabilities in Gulf economies.
How does the agreement impact Israel's position?
The deal is seen as unfavorable for Israel, omitting core demands such as dismantling Iran’s enrichment and missile programs and catching Israeli officials off guard.

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