18 June, 2026

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Arab Countries Must Unite With Iran

By Mass L. Usuf

Mass Usuf

People are either your brothers in faith or your equals in humanity  ~ (Imam Ali – Nahj al Balagha)

The proposition that the Arab countries should unite with the Islamic Republic of Iran is not complex, it is clear and straightforward. However, it requires certain essential qualities – at a minimum – such as the courage, unmatched bravery and military genius exemplified by Khalid bin Walid, along with inspiration drawn from the visionary leadership and wisdom of Ali ibn Abu Talib, often called the “Gate of the City of Knowledge” by Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him).  inally, Ikhlas – a sincere and solemn commitment to be ummatan wasatan – a middle nation, neither the extreme of hedonism nor monasticism. A question that may arise is whether the Arab rulers have any of these qualities. Never mind that perception, given the real threat to their security and existence new policies and feasible alternatives would be welcome. The issue should be considered objectively, with logic and reasoning rather than emotion.

The proposal to unite with Iran may be assessed further against a range of multiple strategic and other considerations.  Some of which are, from the perspective of 1. Quranic teachings – what are its guidance and directions 2. Eschatology – lessons to derive from the three Abrahamic faiths – Judaism, Christianity and Islam 3. Geopolitics – the evolving shape and form 4. Geo-economy – emerging dynamics in international trade 5. Greater Israel project – role of Zionism and Christian evangelicals 6. Imperialism – USA hegemony and its vassal European countries 7. The growing interest of China and Russia in the region 8. Peace, security and prosperity for all.

This column does not examine each point in detail; rather, it focuses on the broader realisation of item 8 – Peace, security and prosperity for all – which by default may interconnectedly reflect on the other areas as relevant. For a detailed study, interested analysts and researchers may pursue on the other points and expand the discussion with the objective of achieving point number 8. Thereby, positively contributing to a world where hegemony, arrogance, deception, oppression, corruption, injustice, stereotyping and war are replaced with overall peaceful living – utopian it may sound but none can deny that a minimal level is certainly achievable.  After all, the establishment of court systems, democratic institutions, humanitarian and international laws are all in order to maintain the semblance of humanity and peaceful existence.

Lessons from the GCC

The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) is a miserable and shameful failure. Shameless because all these are Muslim countries and supposed to be bounded by fraternity. Sadly, by their own conduct they opted to go in different directions. The GCC was established in 1981 as an alliance of six Middle Eastern countries viz. Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).  The objective was to create unity in defence, economy, politics and culture among its members.

These countries are basically family autocracies where the ruling families monopolise political power. The wealth of these nations is concentrated within the family.  Wealth refers to the abundance of oil and natural gas supplies. On matters of national, regional or global interest overall priority is given to the stability, continuation and protection of the family status quo. Thus, justice, fairness and reasonableness in the objective sense is not found in their play book except when it is favourable for them. Political dissent in these countries is unheard of as opposition is suppressed to maintain the family dominance.

Some of the many reasons for the failure of the GCC as an alliance arises from the internal strife between these ruling families, political rivalry, the ego of being richer than the other, lacking sincere commitment for deep integration and collective strength, no strong institutional depth to handle crises situations between members of the alliance (the 2017 Qatar blockade serves as an example: where deep fractures within some of the countries – Saudi Arabia, UAE and Bahrain – became evident when they ignored GCC mechanisms designed to act as a single unified body). The credibility of GCC as a collective was questioned and its weakness and impotency as an alliance was disgracefully exposed when billions of Muslims worldwide witnessed their silence on the face of the Gaza genocide.

Embracing Hegemony

This disunity offered a great opportunity for the imperialists and the deceptive Zionists to play the role of good cop.  These external powers were quick to exploit the division and manipulate to widen the cracks within, encouraged the rulers to look for solutions for their internal disputes bilaterally rather than through the collective mechanism of the GCC or urging the rulers to use external powers (the colonialists and Zionists) to influence a solution. These hegemonic schemes were to effectively undermine the strategic autonomy of the GCC as an alliance and to limit its influence globally.

The Americans backed by the Zionists succeeded in this project – ‘congratulation’. In order to protect their rulership, they willingly embraced this hegemony.  The GCC today is not taken seriously by anyone. What a sad and unfortunate predicament compared to other vibrant and functioning alliances as the European Union, ASEAN. These are alliances between countries and peoples belonging to different religions, cultures, ethnicities, races and languages while the GCC consists of one Arab people, one Arabic language, one religion, one culture.  A reasonable person may ask, “who is to be blamed for this state of affairs?”

Scaremongering

Scaremongering, is the act of exploiting feelings of fear by using exaggerated rumours of impending danger. (Wikipedia)

These little sheikhdoms are strategically sitting atop the vast oil and natural gas wealth of the world.  Some of them are demographically fragile with a negligible local population surpassed by a large expatriate workforce, some are geographically tiny and all are militarily weak. They also became easy pawns to colonialist and imperialist advances due to lack of exposure to manipulations, scheming and geo-politics.

For the USA this was an opportunity with several windows wide open to control the oil wealth and through that global dominance. The best weapon they used to get around these Arab rulers was by scare mongering.  They used the tools of fear, uncertainty and doubt as manipulative tactics to strategically influence perception by spreading disinformation, suspicion and negative impressions, fabricated or taken out of context. Thereby, surreptitiously and diplomatically harming the trust, confidence and reliability that existed between the rulers and their people and, the general Muslim nations both inside and outside the middle east region.

The Americans earlier used Saddam Hussein as the monster. The Council on Foreign Relations reported, “The Bush administration said it believed Saddam could pass weapons of mass destruction to Osama bin Laden’s network or other terrorists.” (February 2005).

After Saddam the US used the Ayatollahs as the bogeymen. Vali Nasr Professor at Johns Hopkins University wrote, “the most important issue in the region has been Iran” it irks Israel, Saudi Arabia and UAE.  “The entirety of our relationship with Persian Gulf monarchies is built around the idea of containing Iran. So, there is no such thing as leaving the Middle East without dealing with Iran.” (January 2022 – ‘The future of US-Middle-east relations’ Council on Foreign Relations).

Trump and Netanyahu Adventurism

For the purpose of their political survival – Trump from the ‘Epstein Class’ and the Genocider Netanyahu – both have placed the entire world at risk militarily, economically and environmentally. If this does not penetrate into the brains of these Arab rulers, they run the risk of facing an irreversible situation in which their masters will not be present to protect them. Already, it is clear that the master’s priority is to protect Israel and not the so-called Arab allies.  Paradoxically, the masters have not been able to protect their own military bases in the GCC soil.

The Arab rulers must recognise that many Gulf citizens are grateful to Iran for punishing the Zionist regime of Israel for the Gaza genocide and admire Iran for bravely standing against the Super power of the world, the USA. The Gulf citizens while they sympathised with the Palestinians were not happy with the stance of the rulers took during the Gaza genocide. They are also not happy with the rulers for normalising relationship with Israel. The regime which in its delusion of Greater Israel has been the cause of wars in Libya, Sudan, Somalia, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, Iraq and now Iran.  It is out of fear of the Rulers that the Gulf citizens are remaining silent.

Exit US or Regime Change

The GCC cannot collectively take a decision asking US to exit from their territories because of internal divisions on the level of dependence on the US. Saudi Arabia is fully reliant on the US to protect its Monarchy from internal revolt and to secure its oil infra structure. Qatar on the other hand did not fully buy into the US demonisation of neighbouring countries and has a soft approach towards the US. Therefore, it will be wise for these Gulf nations to individually choose to walk away from US dominance since reliance on US has only brought them trouble and not the highly anticipated protection.

If the war continues and the GCC states get hit continuously oil production will stop, tourism disrupted, industries will be shut down, no water and electricity if desalination and power plants are bombed, scarcity for food and the economy will be at a standstill. There is the threat of internal revolt by the Gulf citizens. The lid of repression, dissatisfaction with the stance on Gaza genocide, servile obedience to the US and embracing Zionist Israel would all explode into the streets. Ironically, regime change will then take place not in Iran but in the GCC countries.

Jeffrey Sachs Professor at Columbia University in one of his many podcasts said, “I warned them (GCC countries) and I will tell them again having the US military on your soil will not give you protection. It’s a magnet for other people’s bombs.”

The time is up for the Arab rulers to think wisely and act quickly.

*Mass L. Usuf, LL. B (Hons) U.K., Attorney at Law (Ex-Corporate and Legal Advisor)

Latest comments

  • 4
    2

    “Report says UAE won’t cut Israel ties if West Bank annexed; Gulf sources push back
    After Reuters reports Abu Dhabi is not considering severing relations entirely, officials tell Ynet that in fact, ‘all options’ would be on the table” The Times of Israel

    “The Governorate of Jerusalem has warned of increasingly open and accelerated moves by extremist Jewish groups that it says are now working methodically to target, and ultimately destroy, Al-Aqsa Mosque to replace it with the so-called ” Third Temple”. The New Arab

    The Sunni nations have always shown a hostility towards the only Shiite nation. Never mind both sects stem from the same religion and have so much in common, but Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain, have worked and aligned more closely to the nation that has illegally occupied, blockaded, stolen lands and still stealing lands from neighbors, is presently bombing at least five nations in the region, has starved and killed thousands of children, have displaced hundreds of thousands of their people, and is committing a genocide.

    • 1
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      “to the nation that has illegally occupied, blockaded, stolen lands and still stealing lands from neighbors, is presently bombing at least five nations in the region, has starved and killed thousands of children, have displaced hundreds of thousands of their people, and is committing a genocide.”

      What about the Armenian genocide? As for Israel proper, forget that the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem met with Adolf Hitler to discuss extermination of the Jews. Then you had the Six-Day War. The Arabs lost the Six-Day War, but then they (Palestinians who are really Jordanians) tried multiple intifadas, utilizing destructive suicide bombs to directly target civilian targets in Israel. This explains the “apartheid” which Ana Kasparian and other anti-semites cry about. It is not apartheid but security 101.

      The Sunni Nations are largely fake states that grew out of the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire. Nomads who became wealthy overnight when Exxon signed a contract. I explained this before, using the example of the lottery. Give a junkie a large sum of money and (statistically) he will blow it quickly. The Sunni nations wouldn’t last long without the aid of the West.

  • 4
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    Contd.

    You would think these shameful nations will show outrage, condemn the violence, or stand up to the violence against unarmed civilians, but instead they now hold those blood stained hands, and dance the hora, with the nation they once hated for good reason.
    They buy weapons from them, make secret deals, sell their fruit in their supermarkets,
    and the UAE is even going to build a settlement for the Jews inside their country. Wonder what their citizens think about that.

    “District to include synagogue, homes, schools, community center, and hotels

    The United Arab Emirates’ senior-most rabbi has revealed plans to develop the Gulf Cooperation Council’s first dedicated Jewish neighborhood, containing faculties and institutions for the thousands of Jews who have made the Emirates their home.”

    This is a nation that has threatened to destroy the 3rd Holy Mosque in Islam, closes it to Muslims during Ramadan, and desecrates it with settler terrorists wearing shoes and entering the premises.
    All that seems fine by these Arab nations. Strange.

    What we are seeing is the strange alliance between some Arab nations and the nation that has killed the most number of Arabs in our lifetime. Iran has had to face betrayal from within their own neighborhood. They are alone and not one neighbor has stepped in to support them, instead supporting the nation that still threatens their people and lands.

    • 3
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      Ashan
      ‘The Sunni-Shia conflict’ was reactivated in the wake of the Iranian Islamic revolution.
      It is not the Islamic part that bothered the US, but that Iran had got put of its imperialist clutches.
      All Arab monarchs count on the US for their protection and a as a safe haven for their stolen wealth.
      They couldn’t care two hoots for other Muslims, including the Arab public.
      In West Asia only Egypt (until Sadat seized power), Iraq and Syria cared for the Palestinians, until the Islamic Republic of Iran stepped in.
      With all the regime changes in the last two decades, Iran is the only remaining credible support for the Palestinians and all Arabs.

      • 1
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        SJ
        I entirely agree with you.
        Palestinians are utterly helpless.
        On another note, funds released from Iraqi oil sales are deposited in an account with the Federal Reserve, which allows total Operational Control.
        This arrangement makes Baghdad reliant on U.S. goodwill to access its revenue.
        The U.S. controls Venezuelan oil sales and revenue, depositing funds into restricted U.S. Treasury-controlled accounts rather than letting the Venezuelan government handle them directly.
        The Iranian war will end with the US taking over Iranian oil revenue.
        Colonialism in play.

        • 1
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          SA
          Iran is a far tougher nut to crack. It took 25 years of persistent bullying to topple the president of Venezuela.
          What Iran comes out with will decide the fate of the Global South.
          The US is desperate and Netanyahu is in hiding.
          Think about it.

    • 4
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      It is not the Islamic part that bothered the US, but that Iran had got out of its imperialist clutches.

      • 0
        0

        SJ,
        “It is not the Islamic part that bothered the US, “
        True, if the US is bothered about Islamic extremists, why did it run away from Afghanistan?
        Plus on an extremism scale of 1 to 10, Iran Saudi Arabia might come out at 3 while Iran could do 6. Who should the US be bombing?

      • 0
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        Correction. Plus on an extremism scale of 1 to 10, Saudi Arabia might come out at 9 and Iran at 3.

  • 8
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    Why, just because they are all Muslims by faith, must they unite? Sri Lankan Muslims often prioritise a “composite Islamic identity” over Tamil ethnic identity, largely driven by insecurity, especially during the civil war and a desire for distinct political recognition, rather than a false belief in universal Muslim unity. While many speak Tamil, they distinguish themselves from Tamils ethnically, often identifying as “Moors,” a separate community with roots often traced to Arab settlers, which, in reality, is false or very minimal, serving as a political and social anchor . Despite sharing the Tamil language and overwhelming Tamil ethnicity or racial origins, many Sri Lankan Muslims reject being labelled as Tamil, particularly in the east, where tensions arose. Emphasising religious identity acts as a “communal galvaniser” to protect minority rights and foster community cohesion against perceived political marginalisation, for perceived political and economic advantages. The community is considered unique in Sri Lanka for defining its ethnic identity primarily through faith, rather than language or race. As they are predominantly and overwhelmingly of South Indian Tamil Dravidian immigrant ancestry, around 95% and even the remaining 5% too are of predominant Tamil ancestry with some Arab.

  • 4
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    However, the rest of the Muslim world does not; to them, religion is important, but their primary identity is through their language, ethnicity/race and not their religion. To an Arab, Turkish, Kurdish, Farsi, Punjabi, Pashun, Malay or Bengali Muslim, it is not their religion that is their primary identity, but their ethnicity and language and then comes religion. An Arab Muslim is far closer to a Christian or Druse Arab than to the Muslim Turk or Iranian. These largely brainwashed Sri Lankan Tamil Muslims or Moors, who have been taught from small to hate and not to identify with their actual Tamil ethnicity, but only their religious identity and a fake Arab origin in the name of their religion, cannot comprehend that the rest of the world does not work that way.

  • 6
    1

    For centuries after the advent of Islam, Arabs and Persians lived in relative peace, with both groups contributing significantly to the development of Islamic culture, science, and philosophy. Historically, there was an intellectual and literary movement (the Shu’ubiyya) where non-Arab Muslims—particularly Persians—sought to assert their cultural equality and distinct identity within the Arab-dominated caliphates.
    Language and Identity: While many regions conquered by Arabs became “Arabized” in language, like North Africa and most of Western Asia, other than the Turks and Kurds, Iran maintained its distinct Farsi language and identity, partly due to its pre-existing high-level civilisation and geography
    The perception of “hatred” or dislike today is often driven by specific geopolitical and sectarian factors rather than inherent ethnic animosity:
    The Iran-Iraq War (1980–1988): This brutal conflict significantly soured relations. It was often framed by Iraqi propaganda as a historic Arab vs. Persian struggle, which fueled modern nationalist and anti-Arab/anti-Iranian sentiments.

  • 6
    1

    Sectarian Divide: Much of the modern friction is viewed through a sectarian lens—largely Shia Iran vs. Sunni-led Arab states like Saudi Arabia.
    Geopolitics: Rivalries for regional dominance lead many Arab governments to view Iran as a destabilising force, while some Arabs (such as those in Lebanon, largely the Shia, or Palestine) may hold more supportive views based on political alliances.
    Individual opinions vary widely and do not always reflect government stances:
    People vs. Government: Many Arabs express a love for Persian culture, food, and people while remaining critical of the Iranian government’s policies
    Intellectual Sentiment: Some scholars note that nationalist sentiments on both sides can lead to mutual prejudice, but this is far from universal.

  • 5
    1

    “The proposition that the Arab countries should unite with the Islamic Republic of Iran is not complex, it is clear and straightforward. “
    The Religious extremism whether it is Buddhism, Islam or Hinduism or Christianity are dangerous and it leads only to dictatorship and oppression of Women. In this world, now billions of Islamists living in the western world due to the dictatorship and oppression of people including women.

    • 1
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      Where does religious extremism enter the picture?
      If you want to c**p you may and CT allows it.
      But try to c**p a little intelligently.

  • 1
    1

    SJ,
    Gulf countries are just owners of oil/gas resources run by the West.
    Islam is merely an instrument to keep the residents (expatriates are the great majority) in line.

    • 1
      0

      The Islamic code is not applied uniformly even in the Arab world.
      Islam has little to do with the politics of Gulf States, whose sheiks owed their existence to Britain and France until the US became their master.

      • 1
        1

        Hello SJ,
        There are big differences between many of the Middle East Countries (and other Islamic Countries) with regard to how Islam influences their relations with Western Countries, I have been in Countries where Sunni and Shia live amicably together, others where Shia are a suppressed minority. Bahrain, Lebanon, and Saudi have sizeable Shia populations, Bahrain actually has a Shia Majority, but is ruled by a Sunni Elite. In many of the Countries in the Gulf the Populations do not take the same view as their ruling elites. These Elites have to very careful how they react to the Israeli, US attacks on Iran, Lebanon and Yemen etc. Trump may have thought he was dealing with another Venezuela, however Netanyahu with the help of some US Republicans managed to convince (or Coerce) Trump that it was necessary to destroy Iran. I remember well the “Three Day Week” in the UK 1974. We are on the brink of much worse unless the Rest of the World takes action against Trump and Netanyahu.
        Best regards

        • 1
          0

          LS
          Thanks
          One only needs to take a look at Muslim attire as one moves eastwards from Saudi Arabia.
          Even a southward movement has much to say.

  • 4
    0

    Keep on dreaming about your imagined world, Islamic unity and one Ummah, which is a fairy tale, that you brainwashed fake Arab Tamil Muslims from South India badly want, as you have created a fake ethnic identity not on your actual origin, ancestry or heritage, as all other people have done, even other Muslim people, but on your religion and an imagined Arab ancestry, that you hardly have, for opportunistic perceived economic and political benefits and now are ebing fast shattered again by this war. You can see that many Arab nations, especially in the Gulf, have secretly told the USA to destroy Iran. Only you, fake Arab, South Indian Tamil origin Muslims are crying and howling, about an imagined Islamic unity that never was there, as you have based your identity on this fake unity and one Ummah, which is just a mirage. There is no one Christian, one Buddhist or one Hindu or whatever people, unless the religion is ethno-religionally based like Judaism, Sikhism, Yasidhi or Druze.
    https://www.thehindu.com/news/international/gulf-allies-privately-tell-trump-to-keep-fighting-until-iran-is-decisively-defeated/article70805652.ece

  • 4
    0

    Muslim people around the world are significantly divided by race, ethnicity, and language, but the Ummah is not considered a myth by its adherents; rather, it is a theological and spiritual concept of unity. But everything else comes first. While Islam is a universal faith, its 2 billion adherents are highly diverse and, in practice, often divided by national, cultural, and political differences:
    Demographic Diversity: Only about 20% of the world’s Muslims are Arab. The largest Muslim population is in Indonesia, Southeast Asia.
    Ethnic and Language Splits: Muslims belong to hundreds of ethnic groups, including South Asians, Arabs, Turks, Persians, Southeast Asians, Europeans and Africans.

  • 4
    0

    Sectarian Differences: The Muslim world is split between Sunni (85–90%) and Shia (10–15%) denominations, which can cause internal conflict.
    Political Fragmentation: The “Muslim world” is not a political monolith. Muslim-majority nations often have competing interests (e.g., tensions between Iran and Pakistan or Saudi Arabia).
    Nationalism: The rise of ethnic nationalism within many Muslim-majority countries can weaken the feeling of global unity. The diversity among Muslims is a practical reality, but the Ummah is a consciously maintained identity that transcends that diversity, but it’s a spiritual one, just like Christians have, but they are still divided by race, ethnicity, language spoken and sect.

  • 4
    0

    No one anywhere else in the world has created an ethnic identity, for a people solely based on religion, a largely fake, imagined origin and on spiritual oneness. It’s only in Sri Lanka or Ceylon, by these fake Arab South Indian origin Tamil Muslims, for perceived opportunistic benefits, first encouraged by the British colonials and then really earnestly by all Sinhalese-led governments, after independence, to divide and rule the island’s Tamils and ultimately destroy every one of these Tamil identities, one by one or weaken and marginalise them to such an extent they cannot fight back. They even encouraged the Arabisation of these fake Arab Tamil Muslims to distance them further from their actual Tamil identity and Tamil Islamic culture. Now these brainwashed people really believe in this myth that they have created, are constantly coming here and posting articles about this imagined Muslim unity, as their identity was based on this myth, and this myth is being constantly dashed and proven to be just a myth. They do not like it

    • 3
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      Rohan25, Notwithstanding the fact that I have said before that I am averse to lengthy comments, I read this!
      You said it right.

  • 2
    3

    “No one anywhere else in the world has created an ethnic identity, for a people solely based on religion,”
    Really?
    Are there a people called the Jews?

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