- NDC Policy Brief 14-22: The unrealized potential of cooperative security in the Arab Gulf, by Silvia Colombo *
Over the past three decades, the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region has undergone a geopolitical transformation, punctuated by a series of critical junctures: the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990-1991, the American and NATO operations in Afghanistan the following decade, the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the Arab uprisings of 2011. These regional geopolitical shifts – often dictated by domestic drivers – have been accompanied by global geostrategic changes. As a result, the Gulf sub-region, encompassing Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries,1 Iraq, Yemen, and Iran, has emerged as the new center of gravity in the MENA region.
Thus, NATO should give the Gulf sub-region special
consideration in its strategy for the South. This sub-region is distinctive and important for NATO for two reasons. First, it plays a key role in global energy geopolitics,
a role further reinforced by the fallout of the Ukraine
war. Second, the specific security challenges confronting
the Gulf sub-region (e.g., terrorism, maritime insecurity and piracy, cyber-attacks and climate change-related
threats) are more in line with what NATO can deliver for
the security of the area. No other sub-region along the
southern flank holds the same potential for NATO. Yet,
the current partnership framework, structured around
the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative (ICI), has major flaws
in terms of format and substance.
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Senior Researcher at the NATO Defense College. The author would like
to thank Cinzia Bianco, Ashraf Keshk, Youssef Mnaili, Marc Ozawa, Cynthia Salloum and Thierry Tardy for their feedback on previous drafts.
They include Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the
United Arab Emirates (UAE).
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