When Neutrality Breaks: Qatar's Gulf Gamble and the Price of Survival
How a small state's strategy of playing all sides collided with regional power politics—and what the 2026 crisis means for the Middle East The Qatar-Gulf rivalry weaves ideology, media warfare, and energy security into one of the region's defining dramas. Sparked by the Arab Spring and crystallized in the 2017 blockade, the conflict reflected competing visions: Qatar's embrace of political Islam versus Saudi and Emirati efforts to preserve monarchical order. Though the 2021 Al-Ula Declaration ended the blockade, deeper strategic contradictions persisted. The 2026 eruption of Operation Epic Fury—and strikes on the shared South Pars/North Field gas reservoir—shattered Qatar's "indispensable neutrality," forcing a painful reckoning. This is the story of how a small state's survival strategy collided with great-power competition, and why in today's Gulf, today's mediator may be tomorrow's target. The rivalry between Qatar and the Saudi-led Quar...