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%T Regional power United Arab Emirates: Abu Dhabi is no longer Saudi Arabia's junior partner
%A Steinberg, Guido
%P 35
%V 10/2020
%D 2020
%K Außenpolitische Neuorientierung; Muhammad Ibn-Zayid Al Nahayan; Muslimbrüder; Politischer Islam; Golf von Aden; Rotes Meer
%@ 1863-1053
%~ SWP
%> https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-69341-5
%X Since the Arab Spring of 2011, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have been pursuing an increasingly active foreign and security policy and have emerged as a leading regional power. The UAE sees the Muslim Brotherhood as a serious threat to regime sta­bility at home, and is fighting the organisation and its affiliated groups throughout the Arab world. The UAE's preferred partners in regional policy are authoritarian rulers who take a critical view of political Islam and combat the Muslim Brother­hood. The new Emirati regional policy is also directed against Iranian expansion in the Middle East. Yet the anti-Iranian dimension of Emirati foreign policy is considerably less pronounced than its anti-Islamist dimension. The UAE wants to gain control of sea routes from the Gulf of Aden to the Red Sea. Since the Yemen conflict began in 2015, it has established a small maritime empire there. The rise of the UAE to a regional power has made the country a more im­portant and simultaneously a more problematic policy partner for Germany and Europe. (author's abstract)
%C DEU
%C Berlin
%G en
%9 Forschungsbericht
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info