MBZ pivots from war footing to Arab coordination as Hormuz reopens
The Gulf's most hawkish leader flies to Cairo to welcome the US-Iran deal and the strait's reopening — after demanding hard terms on Iran's missiles and nuclear program
Summary
Mohammed Bin Zayed flew to Cairo on 15 June to meet President El-Sisi, where the two welcomed the agreement to end the war with Iran and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, stressing continued Arab coordination — on the eve of Sisi's G7-sidelines meeting with Trump. The MoU, formalised by Trump and Iran's Pezeshkian on 17-18 June, mandates a full Hormuz reopening without Iranian tolls for at least 60 days. Before the deal, the United Arab Emirates had pushed hard terms: ADNOC chief Sultan Al Jaber said Hormuz "needs to be open unconditionally," and Abu Dhabi demanded a plan for Iran's ballistic missiles and nuclear program. A US official called MBZ the Gulf's "hawkish" leader who backed the deal after Trump canvassed Arab and Muslim leaders. By 19 June, tankers were crossing the strait again at roughly 20 a day.
By the numbers
- 15 June 2026 — MBZ-Sisi meeting in Cairo, before the G7.
- 60 — minimum days the MoU keeps Hormuz open without Iranian tolls.
- ~20/day — tankers crossing Hormuz again by 19 June, including Saudi and UAE VLCCs.
Why it matters
The pivot caps a war in which the UAE moved from hawkish demands — and, by one report, a direct strike on Iran — to underwriting the ceasefire and the shipping recovery its economy depends on. Aligning with Cairo and the broader Arab bloc lets Mohammed Bin Zayed shape the post-war order rather than be exposed by it.
What to watch
- Whether Hormuz traffic and insurance rates fully normalise.
- How the UAE manages relations with Tehran given the strike report.
- Abu Dhabi's role in any monitoring of the Iran deal's implementation.