Staff Profiles
Publication details for Dr Christopher Davidson
Davidson, Christopher M. (2009). Dubai and the United Arab Emirates: Security Threats. British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 36(3): 431-447.- Publication type: Journal papers: academic
- ISSN/ISBN: 1353-0194, 1469-3542
- DOI: 10.1080/13530190903338953
- View online: Online version
- Durham research online: DRO record
Author(s) from Durham
Abstract
The United Arab Emirates’ (UAE) wealthiest emirate, Abu Dhabi, has
built up the UAE Armed Forces in recent decades by procuring some of the finest
military hardware available. This has provided the UAE with a strong defence
shield and has undoubtedly reduced the threat of foreign invasion. However, the
UAE’s hard security capabilities are either insufficient or inappropriate for
countering remaining regional threats from Iran or, to a lesser extent, other Arab states. As such, the UAE has had little option but to remain under a Western military umbrella. Moreover, as an unfortunate but perhaps inescapable hidden cost of its emergence as the region’s premier free port, for many years the UAE’s second wealthiest emirate of Dubai has attracted the attention of both international
criminal and terrorist organisations, many of which have exploited the emirate’s laissez-faire attitudes and impressive physical infrastructure to set up various smuggling, gun-running, human-trafficking, and money-laundering operations. Despite Dubai’s undoubted usefulness to such groups, the final section of this article will reveal that the UAE has been unable to remain completely in the eye of the storm and has suffered from a number of terrorist attacks on its own soil.
