伊朗反击引发海湾盟友倒向华盛顿,地区紧张局势升级


特朗普称海湾国家对伊朗袭击其领土感到”震惊”

摩根·菲利普斯报道
福克斯新闻

2026年3月27日 美国东部时间下午12:44发布

沙特阿拉伯和其他海湾盟友正展现出一种悄无声息但意义重大的转变,他们对伊朗的态度正在发生变化。地区内不断升级的袭击正在考验着这些国家多年来在华盛顿与德黑兰之间精心维持的平衡。

在过去十年的大部分时间里,沙特阿拉伯和阿拉伯联合酋长国等国家试图避免与伊朗直接对抗,即便依赖美国的军事支持,仍维持着外交和经济联系。但这种中间立场正日益承受压力。

这一策略旨在使海湾国家远离直接冲突。但官员和分析师表示,伊朗不断扩大的袭击正缩小中立的空间,促使一些海湾国家更靠近华盛顿。

这种转变最明显的迹象之一是据报道沙特阿拉伯允许美军使用泰夫国王法赫德空军基地(King Fahd Air Base)。这个位于西部的设施自海湾战争时期以来就未被用于美军作战行动。

[HEGSETH抨击英国,称伊朗的混乱报复已将其自身盟友”推入美国阵营”]

这种转变在整个地区都可见一斑。阿联酋在一系列袭击发生后,已与德黑兰断绝外交关系,关闭了与伊朗有关联的机构,并对与伊斯兰革命卫队有关的网络展开打击。

与此同时,巴林领导了在联合国推动通过安理会决议谴责伊朗对海湾国家发动袭击的努力。沙特阿拉伯、阿联酋、卡塔尔和科威特等多个国家发表了协调一致的声明,谴责伊朗的行动并主张自卫权利。

一位海湾官员告诉福克斯新闻数字版,这些海湾国家与美国的立场一致,认为伊朗的导弹开发、铀浓缩项目以及对地区激进组织的支持需要”得到解决和遏制”,但仍反对打击伊朗境内的关键基础设施。

卡塔尔也采取了具体措施回应伊朗袭击,在伊朗打击关键能源基础设施后,驱逐了伊朗军事和安全武官并命令他们离开该国。不过,卡塔尔尚未完全断绝外交关系,即便紧张局势升级,仍保持着调解人的角色。

(图片:沙特阿拉伯和其他海湾盟友正展现出对伊朗态度的重大转变。Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

一位知情官员向福克斯新闻透露,卡塔尔首相周四在华盛顿进行了会谈,重点讨论国防合作和保护关键能源基础设施。

泰夫国王法赫德空军基地位于沙特阿拉伯领土深处,远离伊朗导弹和无人机的射程,将为美国提供数十年来未曾依赖的战略纵深。美国在该地区的军事部署长期以来以波斯湾沿岸更多暴露的基地为中心,包括卡塔尔和阿联酋的枢纽。

《华尔街日报》报道中援引的知情人士称,沙特阿拉伯同意让美军使用该基地。五角大楼和沙特大使馆拒绝对该基地置评。

在潜在的战斗区域,战斗机通常关闭应答机进行”隐蔽”飞行,因此不会出现在民用航班雷达上。沙特阿拉伯受严格控制的媒体环境意味着,几乎没有独立的本地报道涉及美军在泰夫国王法赫德空军基地的活动。

沙特政府在谈到其对伊朗的立场时表示:”我们今天的主要关切是保卫自己免受针对民众和民用基础设施的日常袭击。伊朗选择了危险的边缘政策而非认真的外交解决方案。这损害了所有相关利益方,而伊朗自身受损最大。”

据报道,基地部署的转变是海湾国家在伊朗袭击升级时重新调整立场的几个迹象之一。

尽管海湾领导人仍未参与战斗行动,并继续寻求外交和解途径,但从扩大与美军合作到更直接、协调一致地谴责伊朗等行动,表明他们对伊朗袭击其领土日益感到不满。

(图片:唐纳德·特朗普总统在佛罗里达州西棕榈滩国际机场登上空军一号前与媒体交谈。Mark Schiefelbein/AP Photo)

唐纳德·特朗普总统周四表示,随着伊朗袭击扩大到传统热点地区之外,包括卡塔尔、沙特阿拉伯、阿联酋、科威特和阿曼在内的地区国家都”感到震惊”。

“他们开始在卡塔尔、沙特阿拉伯、阿联酋、科威特、阿曼开火,”他在内阁会议上说,”他们开始向这些国家射击。他们——他们确实感到震惊,我们也是。知道为什么吗?因为他们病了。他们有接管中东的计划。”

自2月底以来,伊朗已向海湾地区发射数百枚导弹和无人机,目标包括沙特阿拉伯、阿联酋、卡塔尔和科威特等国。在2月28日”史诗狂怒行动”(Operation Epic Fury)发起后,伊朗警告将报复美军及其地区伙伴,这一威胁很快转化为对该地区基地和基础设施的打击。

多年来在海湾首都的外交接触和缓和努力未能保护它们免受伊朗报复。

沙特阿拉伯在2023年签署了一项恢复外交关系的协议,而阿联酋则维持了经济渠道,允许有限的商业活动继续。

与此同时,海湾国家采取的措施仍然是有节制的。

美国已经在沙特阿拉伯的基地开展行动,包括苏丹亲王空军基地,该基地一直是美军在该地区空中行动和部队保护的枢纽。但这些地点靠近波斯湾,更容易受到伊朗导弹和无人机的威胁,而像泰夫这样的内陆地点则能提供更大的纵深和更长的预警时间。

以色列前国防军军官、国家安全分析师埃胡德·埃拉姆(Ehud Eilam)告诉福克斯新闻数字版:”他们现在必须非常谨慎。他们知道战后仍要与伊朗共存。”

世界政治研究所院长、前国防部长唐纳德·拉姆斯菲尔德特别助理詹姆斯·罗宾斯(James Robbins)说:”他们无法真正猛烈回击。他们是小国,难以防御。”

罗宾斯补充说,海湾国家面临长期困境,警告称即使伊朗被削弱,也可能重新集结并构成持续威胁。

“伊朗会卷土重来,”他说,”他们会重建……然后伺机报复。”

尽管如此,分析师表示,海湾国家如果愿意,可以扩大与美国的合作。

埃拉姆说:”他们可以加强与美国和以色列在防空、情报、网络等方面的合作。”

他们还可以参与重新开放霍尔木兹海峡的任务,全球约20%的石油通常通过该海峡运输。由于伊朗威胁试图通过的船只,海峡的航运已陷入停滞。

“他们最好的任务是确保霍尔木兹海峡的安全,以及类似的任务,利用他们拥有的任何海上力量、海岸警卫队类型的力量和空军,”埃拉姆说。

尽管紧张局势升级,海湾领导人仍继续寻求外交和解途径。

沙特阿拉伯最近主办了旨在探讨潜在停火的地区会谈,这凸显了海湾国家在加强安全姿态的同时,仍在寻求控制冲突。

目前,海湾国家似乎正在一条日益狭窄的道路上航行:随着伊朗袭击不断增加,它们更靠近华盛顿,但在一场冲突中仍未完全军事结盟——这场冲突可能在战斗结束后长期塑造该地区。

Iran backlash forces Gulf allies toward Washington as regional tensions rise

Trump said Gulf states were ‘shocked’ by Iranian attacks on their territory

By Morgan Phillips
Fox News

Published March 27, 2026 12:44pm EDT

[Saudi Arabia] and other Gulf allies are showing signs of a quiet but consequential shift in their posture toward Iran, as escalating attacks across the region are testing years of careful balancing between Washington and Tehran.

For much of the past decade, countries like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) sought to avoid direct confrontation with Iran, maintaining diplomatic and economic ties even while relying on U.S. military backing. But that middle ground is increasingly under strain.

That strategy was designed to keep Gulf states out of direct confrontation. But officials and analysts say Iran’s expanding attacks are narrowing the space for neutrality, pushing some Gulf states closer to Washington.

One of the clearest signs of that shift is a reported move by Saudi Arabia to grant U.S. forces access to King Fahd Air Base in Taif, a western facility not used for American combat operations since the Gulf War era.

[HEGSETH BLASTS BRITS, SAYS IRAN’S CHAOTIC RETALIATION HAS DRIVEN ITS OWN ALLIES ‘INTO THE AMERICAN ORBIT’]

The shift is also visible across the region. The UAE has severed diplomatic ties with Tehran, shut down Iranian-linked institutions and launched a crackdown on networks tied to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps after a wave of attacks.

Bahrain, meanwhile, led efforts at the United Nations to pass a Security Council resolution condemning Iranian strikes on Gulf states, while multiple countries — including Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar and Kuwait — have issued coordinated statements denouncing Iran’s actions and asserting their right to self-defense.

These Gulf states are in line with the U.S. view that Iran’s missile development, uranium enrichment programs and support for regional militant groups need to be “addressed and curtailed” but remain opposed to strikes on critical infrastructure inside Iran, a Gulf official told Fox News Digital.

Qatar has also taken concrete steps in response to Iranian attacks, expelling Iranian military and security attachés and ordering them to leave the country after strikes on critical energy infrastructure. However, Qatar has stopped short of severing full diplomatic ties, maintaining its role as a mediator even as tensions rise.

Saudi Arabia and other Gulf allies are showing signs of a quiet but consequential shift in their posture toward Iran.(Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

The Qatari prime minister was in Washington for talks focused on defense cooperation and protecting critical energy infrastructure Thursday, an official briefed on the visit told Fox News.

King Fahd Air Base’s location, deep inside Saudi territory and farther from Iran’s missile and drone reach, would offer strategic depth the U.S. has not relied on in decades. U.S. military posture in the region has long centered on more exposed bases along the Persian Gulf, including hubs in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

Sources familiar with the matter cited in Wall Street Journal reporting said Saudi Arabia agreed to let American forces use the base. The Pentagon and the Saudi embassy declined to comment on the base.

Combat aircraft routinely operate “dark” with transponders off in potential combat zones, so they would not appear on civilian flight radar. Saudi Arabia’s tightly controlled media environment also means there are few, if any, independent local reports of U.S. aircraft activity at King Fahd Air Base.

“Our primary concern today is to defend ourselves from the daily attacks on our people and our civilian infrastructure,” the Saudi government said in a statement on its posture toward Iran. “Iran has chosen dangerous brinkmanship over serious diplomatic solutions. This harms every stakeholder involved but none more than Iran itself.”

The reported basing shift is one of several signs that Gulf states are recalibrating their position as Iranian attacks escalate across the region.

While Gulf leaders are still stopping short of joining combat operations and continue to pursue diplomatic off-ramps, their actions — from expanding cooperation with U.S. forces to issuing more direct and coordinated condemnations of Iran — suggest growing frustrations with Iranian attacks on their territory.

President Donald Trump speaks with the media before boarding Air Force One Monday, March 23, 2026, at Palm Beach International Airport in West Palm Beach, Fla.(Mark Schiefelbein/AP Photo)

President Donald Trump said Thursday that countries across the region — including Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Oman— were “shocked” as Iranian attacks expanded beyond traditional flashpoints.

“They start shooting in Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Oman,” he said at a Cabinet meeting. “They start shooting at them. And they were — they were. Everybody was shocked, including us. You know why? Because they’re sick. And they had a plan to take over the Middle East.”

Since late February, Iran has fired hundreds of missiles and drones across the Gulf, targeting countries from Saudi Arabia and the UAE to Qatar and Kuwait. After the launch of Operation Epic Fury Feb. 28, Iran warned it would retaliate against U.S. forces and their regional partners, a threat it quickly carried out with strikes on bases and infrastructure across the region.

Years of diplomatic outreach and de-escalation efforts in Gulf capitals failed to shield them from Iranian retaliation.

Saudi Arabia signed an agreement in 2023 to restore diplomatic ties while the United Arab Emirates maintained economic channels that allowed limited commercial activity to continue.

At the same time, the steps Gulf countries have taken remain measured.

The United States already operates from bases in Saudi Arabia, including Prince Sultan Air Base, which has served as a hub for U.S. air operations and force protection in the region. But those sites sit closer to the Gulf and are more exposed to Iranian missile and drone threats, while more interior locations like Taif provide greater depth and longer warning times against potential strikes.

“They have to be very careful even now,” former Israeli Defense Forces officer and national security analyst Ehud Eilam told Fox News Digital. “They know that they would have to live with Iran after the war.”

“They can’t really strike back hard,” said James Robbins, Institute of World Politics dean and former special assistant to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. “They’re small countries, and they’re hard to defend.”

Robbins added that Gulf states face a long-term dilemma, warning that even a weakened Iran would likely regroup and pose a continued threat.

“Iran will come back,” he said. “They will rebuild … and they will be out for revenge.”

Still, analysts say, Gulf states could expand cooperation with the U.S. if they wanted to.

“They could increase the cooperation with the U.S. and Israel as far as air defense, intelligence, cyber and so on,” Eilam said.

They could also join in on a mission to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the world’s oil typically passes. Shipping operations through the strait have ground to a standstill due to Iranian threats to vessels that attempt to pass.

“Their best mission would be securing the Strait of Hormuz, those types of missions, with whatever sea forces they have, [Coast Guard-]type forces and their air forces,” he said.

Even as tensions rise, Gulf leaders have continued to pursue diplomatic off-ramps.

Saudi Arabia recently hosted regional talks aimed at exploring a potential ceasefire, underscoring that Gulf states are still seeking to contain the conflict even as they bolster their security posture.

For now, Gulf states appear to be navigating a narrowing path, moving closer to Washington as Iranian attacks mount, while stopping short of full military alignment in a conflict that could shape the region long after the fighting ends.

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