Gulf leaders meet in Saudi Arabia to discuss response to Iranian strikes

Gulf Cooperation Council countries' national flags are seen hanging in Mubarakiya Market in Kuwait City, Kuwait, Dec. 23, 2024. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman chaired a consultative meeting of the Gulf Cooperation ​Council in Jeddah on Tuesday.

Gulf Cooperation Council countries' national flags are seen hanging in Mubarakiya Market in Kuwait City, Kuwait, Dec. 23, 2024. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman chaired a consultative meeting of the Gulf Cooperation ​Council in Jeddah on Tuesday. (Mohamed Abd El Ghany, Reuters )


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Gulf leaders met in Saudi Arabia to discuss responses to Iranian attacks.
  • The meeting followed Iranian missile and drone strikes on Gulf states since Feb. 28.

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman chaired a consultative meeting of the Gulf Cooperation ​Council in Jeddah on Tuesday, state media said, the first in-person meeting of Gulf leaders since their states became a front in ‌the Iran war two months ago.

A Gulf official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the meeting aimed ⁠to craft a response to the ​thousands of Iranian missile and drone ⁠attacks Gulf states have faced since the U.S. and Israel launched the ‌war with strikes on ‌Iran on Feb. 28.

Saudi state media said the summit discussed "topics and ⁠issues related to regional and international developments, ⁠and the coordination of efforts regarding them."

The Iran war has seen key energy infrastructure in all six GCC states damaged, with U.S.-linked firms and other civilian infrastructure, as well as military installations, also targeted.

Attacks have subsided since the U.S. and Iran entered a ceasefire on April 8, though Gulf ‌capitals remain wary of resumed conflict, with U.S.-Iran talks ​for a permanent deal to end the conflict so far inconclusive.

Qatar's emir, Kuwait's crown prince, Bahrain's king and the United Arab Emirates' foreign minister attended the summit, Saudi state media reported. It was unclear who represented Oman, the remaining member of the GCC along with Saudi Arabia, which hosts the council's headquarters.

The GCC has faced some criticism from the UAE over what ​it said has been an inadequate response to the war.

"It is true that, logistically, ‌the GCC countries ‌supported each ⁠other, but politically and militarily, I think their position was the weakest in history," senior UAE official Anwar Gargash told a conference in the UAE on Monday.

"I expected such a weak position from the Arab League, and I am ‌not surprised by it, but ​I have not expected it from the ‌GCC, and I am ⁠surprised by it."

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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