Why the UAE rarely has to choose

In global geopolitics and economics, strategy is usually defined by what a country is willing to give up. The conventional wisdom insists that a nation must pick a lane: align with the East or the West, rely on hydrocarbons or pivot entirely to clean energy, build a tourist destination or an industrial logistics hub, operate a heavily regulated state economy or embrace the chaos of free markets. Most countries spend decades agonising over these choices. The United Arab Emirates quietly built its entire model on a different premise, one that took the world years to notice. For many, the early evidence looked like extravagance. The country had one of the most advanced highway networks on earth, then spent billions on Etihad Rail, a 900-kilometre railway running from the Saudi border to Fujairah on the Gulf of Oman. It had exported oil through the Strait of Hormuz for decades without disruption, then invested $4.2 billion in the Habshan–Fujairah pipeline, an alternative route to the Gulf of Oman completed years before Hormuz became the centre of a regional conflict. Analysts filed these under ambition, or excess. They missed the design principle: neither project replaced what came before; each expanded the country's options. Once you see that principle, the country's most puzzling decisions stop being puzzling. ADNOC expands production capacity while Masdar operates renewable projects in more than forty countries, and Barakah, the Arab world's first nuclear power plant, generates a quarter of the national electricity supply. Unlike other nations engaged in contentious debates over transitioning between energy sources, the UAE chose not to schedule the retirement of its legacy energy sector. Dubai became a global tourism destination, a financial hub, and a logistics powerhouse, sectors that many countries view as competing priorities. Abu Dhabi manages one of the world's largest sovereign wealth funds while building industrial capacity in semiconductors and advanced manufacturing. Rather than replacing one strength with another, the UAE kept layering new ones on top of the old. The same philosophy shapes the country's relationships, where the pressure to choose is far more severe than in any boardroom. Washington and Beijing have turned artificial intelligence into a loyalty test, pressing partners to commit to American platforms or Chinese systems. The UAE built deep partnerships with Microsoft, NVIDIA and Google, engaged Chinese technology firms, and launched Falcon, its own large language model and K2 Think, its fully sovereign next-generation reasoning system. After Russia's invasion of Ukraine split the international system into competing political and economic camps, the UAE maintained dialogue and trade with Moscow, preserved its strategic partnership with Washington, deepened cooperation with Europe, and continued engaging with Kyiv, eventually becoming one of the most active mediators in humanitarian prisoner exchanges between the two sides. These communication channels remained viable while others collapsed, primarily because they had been meticulously cultivated long before a crisis necessitated their use. East and West, oil and solar, tourism and industry, regulation and open markets: the choices the world insists are binary, the UAE simply refuses to see as mutually exclusive. Every capability added and every relationship preserved compounds into options that no single alignment could deliver. The recent regional conflict became the clearest demonstration of that philosophy. Trade corridors kept functioning despite disruptions across the region, diplomatic channels remained open across competing interests, and the economy absorbed shocks that would have fractured any country built around a single alignment. A country that depends on one ally has one option in a crisis. A country connected to many has room to move. This is why the model resists imitation. Countries whose strategies are shaped by ideology inevitably exclude whatever contradicts their identity, surrendering options before negotiations even begin. Pragmatism carries no such tax. Strategy, the textbooks insist, is the art of difficult choices. The UAE has spent decades demonstrating another approach: build enough options, and the difficult choice gradually disappears. (Naoufer Ramoul is a senior TV presenter and producer at Dubai Media Incorporated, and the host of the award-winning political show Qabel lil Niqash on Dubai TV. She has worked as a presenter at Al Jazeera, Al Arabiya and Alhurra.)