Welcome back to Semafor Gulf, where we aren’t allowed to expense our pager bills. I’ve been living and reporting from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar for almost 20 years, but their geography keeps shifting. When I started, editors in New York considered the Gulf and the Levant nearly identical, and some Gulf bureaus were often simply another base to cover conflicts, in Iraq, Israel-Palestine, and beyond. But in fact, Rome and Dubai are equidistant from Gaza, something you feel particularly intensely in this dangerous week on the Lebanese border. One of the curious things of living and working here is how little people talk and think about the war in Gaza. It’s not ignored. Coverage is constant and deep on Arabic TV channels and in newspapers. People are donating to charities for Gaza, and Arabs are discussing the conflict at home. But it doesn’t seep through to business conversations and most social interactions. The Gulf at least seems to have drifted further from the conflict than ever. The transformation, optimism, wealth, demographics, and challenges here have no immediate connection to the suffering in Gaza, Lebanon, or Syria, and there’s little legal space here for political expression. And yet the Gulf powers remain central to the diplomatic story, and determinedly optimistic about their long-term economic ties to Israel. As Kelsey Warner reports below: Even in this brutal year, trade between Israel and the UAE ticked up. We’ll be navigating this complex, shifting geography at Semafor Gulf, bringing you the key stories from local and regional media, along with our exclusive journalism from here and around the world, as it impacts the Gulf. We aim to inform — and occasionally — delight you. As my editor Ben said on Monday, we approach this with humility. While my team and I have been at this for some decades, we are only as good as our sources. Email us here, send tips, and tell me when we’ve made mistakes. Thank you for joining us! |