
Just one day after Saudi Arabia and Pakistan formalized their mutual defense treaty, India and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) countered with their own defense agreement, signed in New Delhi. The pact, overseen by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and UAE President Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, commits both nations to treat any aggression against one as an attack on both, aiming to bolster regional security amid shifting alliances.
This move follows India’s concerns over the Saudi-Pakistan treaty, which includes potential nuclear support and has raised alarms in New Delhi due to historical tensions with Pakistan. The India-UAE agreement, building on their 2022 Comprehensive Economic Partnership, now extends to military cooperation, with joint exercises and intelligence sharing at its core. A senior Indian official described it as a “strategic necessity,” while the UAE emphasized shared interests in countering extremism.
The timing, just after the Saudi-Pakistan signing, underscores a competitive realignment in the region, with both India and the UAE seeking to counterbalance Pakistan’s growing influence. The international community, including the U.S. and China, is closely watching as these pacts reshape South Asian and Middle Eastern dynamics.


