The relationship between Mohammed bin Salman and Mohammed bin Zayed has quietly but decisively shifted into a phase marked by lasting tension rather than mere tactical disagreements. The situation between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi transcends personal style or economic rivalry, emerging as a subdued clash of two visions of regional leadership. This rivalry is driven by constant comparisons, an expanding gap in international recognition, and a strategic jealousy stemming from the UAE’s quiet but successful occupation of influential spaces Saudi Arabia has long considered its domain.
For decades, the Gulf’s implicit hierarchy appeared stable. Saudi Arabia represented central power through demographics, energy wealth, and religious authority, while the UAE was seen as an efficient, innovative partner essential for regional modernization but structurally secondary. This order began to unravel as the Emirates evolved from a commercial hub into a global strategic player influencing security, diplomacy, and ideology far beyond their size. From then on, comparisons became uncomfortable for Riyadh.
Mohammed bin Salman’s rise was characterized by rapid acceleration. By quickly consolidating political, security, and economic control, he broke away from the Kingdom’s traditional collegial governance. This approach granted immediate control and decisiveness but also resulted in extreme personalization of power and continuous international exposure. In contrast, Mohammed bin Zayed built authority gradually. His influence emerged through the careful handling of post-Arab Spring shocks, early neutralization of Islamist movements, and the creation of institutions capable of managing crises without exposing the state’s leadership. This initial divergence created a persistent gap in strategic maturity.
Differences in governance styles widened this gap. In Saudi Arabia, rapid centralization involved visible coercion, mass arrests, high-profile economic purges, and personalized anti-corruption campaigns. These actions reinforced immediate authority but weakened internal regulation and entrenched reliance on coercion. In the UAE, political control relies more on institutional, legal, and administrative mechanisms, coupled with preventive surveillance and subtle balance management. This framework limits crises, compartmentalizes risk, and prevents the state from being held hostage by one person’s decisions.
Human rights have significantly influenced international perceptions of this divergence. Under Mohammed bin Salman, increased use of the death penalty, including in political and security-related cases, mass executions, and the imprisonment of activists and dissidents have drawn sustained criticism. These practices impose lasting diplomatic costs, undermine reform narratives, and create structural distrust among Western partners. In the UAE, while the system remains authoritarian, control is more regulated and less demonstrative. Authorities prioritize prevention, administrative neutralization, and targeted surveillance without using capital punishment as a political tool. This difference enhances Abu Dhabi’s image as predictable and manageable.
The murder of Jamal Khashoggi marked a turning point, crystallizing doubts about decision-making at the Saudi apex and placing Mohammed bin Salman under constant international scrutiny. Since then, while Saudi Arabia remains indispensable, every major initiative is filtered through that rupture. Mohammed bin Zayed, by enforcing strict discipline in communication, delegation, and decision-making, avoided such reputational shocks. In a world where credibility affects long-term partnerships, this restraint became a strategic advantage.
Frustration in Riyadh deepened as Vision 2030 aimed to reposition Saudi Arabia as the Arab world’s economic, cultural, and political center while investors, diplomats, and policymakers continued to view Dubai and Abu Dhabi as more predictable and operationally reliable environments. This recognition gap, more than material differences, fueled growing strategic jealousy. Saudi Arabia takes significant political risks and spends heavily, yet the Emirates capture disproportionate dividends in image, influence, and centrality.
Saudi decisions targeting the Emirati model must be viewed through this lens. Mandating multinational headquarters to relocate to Riyadh is not merely a domestic development policy; it is a deliberate attempt to erode the Emirates’ comparative advantage, now perceived as a direct competitor siphoning prestige and flows Riyadh believes should naturally accrue to it. Psychologically, this marks a break; Abu Dhabi is no longer just an ally but a pole to be contained.
Rivalry now crystallizes across specific arenas. Economically, through competition for regional headquarters, financial hubs, logistics, and capital. Diplomatically, in relations with Washington, Europe, and major Asian powers, where the UAE is often perceived as more predictable and disciplined. Ideologically, in the fight against political Islam, Mohammed bin Zayed has imposed a clear, doctrinal, consistent stance against the Muslim Brotherhood across state institutions. Despite official hostility, Saudi Arabia has adopted a more fluctuating approach, accepting tactical alliances when expedient, most visibly in Yemen with actors linked to Islah.
Yemen is the clearest indicator. Officially allied, Riyadh and Abu Dhabi pursued different objectives. Saudi Arabia focused on preserving formal state unity and securing its southern border. The UAE concentrated on controlling strategic points, ports, maritime routes, and coastal zones by backing local forces capable of ensuring stability, particularly in the South. The Southern Transitional Council, supported by Abu Dhabi, became an essential player on the ground. For Riyadh, the rise














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