UAE Israel - Does Abu Dhabi’s OPEC Exit Ultimately Fund Tel Aviv
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UAE Israel: The OPEC Exit That Funds a Silent Alliance

⏱️ 7 Mins Read

Both the UAE Israel are not yet ready to answer openly, but a documented trail of arms deals, sovereign wealth investments, and a new trade corridor tells the story.

The announcement made by the United Arab Emirates to exit OPEC from May 1, 2026, disassociating itself from a club it has belonged to since 1967, without consulting Saudi Arabia, reflects Abu Dhabi’s long-term strategic and economic vision.

Under OPEC rules, the UAE was allowed to produce 3.2 million barrels per day. Its actual capacity was 4.8 million barrels per day. By leaving, it freed itself to produce and sell significantly more oil. The UAE has stated it wants to reach 5 million barrels per day by 2027. More oil means more money. The question worth asking seriously is: where does that money go, and does any of it reach Israel? The UAE-Israel financial relationship is already on the public record.

What the UAE and Israel Have Already Built

The UAE and Israel did not have formal relations until September 15, 2020, when they signed the Abraham Accords in Washington. What followed was not just diplomacy but a rapid and systematic exchange of money, technology, and military cooperation that has only grown since then.

Mubadala Investment Company, an Abu Dhabi–based sovereign investor funded through oil surplus revenues, invested in six Israeli-based venture capital firms after the Accords.  The names included Mangrove Capital Partners, Entrée Capital, Aleph Capital, Viola Ventures, Pitango, and MizMaa. These were strategic investments, designed to place Emirati oil money directly inside the Israeli startup ecosystem.

DisruptAD, the venture capital arm of Abu Dhabi’s sovereign fund ADQ, co-led a $105 million Series B investment into Israeli cultivated meat company Aleph Farms. Mubadala Petroleum purchased a stake worth approximately $1.1 billion in an offshore Tamar gas field belonging to one of Israel’s largest energy companies, Delek.

The UAE government also announced a $10 billion dedicated investment fund for Israel covering energy, manufacturing, water, space, healthcare, and agricultural technology. Every dirham of this investment originated from oil.

The Arms Deals

In November 2025, the Israeli defense company Elbit Systems announced a record $2.3 billion contract with an unnamed international customer, which was later identified as the United Arab Emirates (UAE). This eight-year deal focuses on supplying advanced J-MUSIC Directional Infrared Countermeasures (DIRCM) systems to protect UAE military and civilian aircraft. This was not an isolated deal inside the UAE-Israel relationship.

Moreover, Abu Dhabi-based defense group EDGE in January 2025 acquired a 30% stake in Israeli defense firm Thirdeye Systems, which makes AI-based drone detection systems. In October 2025, Israel’s Controp Precision Technologies, which makes surveillance systems, opened a subsidiary in Abu Dhabi with a total investment of $30 million, headed by an Israeli chief executive.

Similarly, Israel Aerospace Industries signed agreements with the UAE’s EDGE to jointly develop unmanned military vessels. Each of these transactions involves Emirati money, which originates from oil sales, entering Israeli defence companies. Some of those companies are direct suppliers of the Israeli military.

The Trade Corridor Connecting UAE Oil to Israeli Ports

Beyond investments and arms deals, the trade corridor connects UAE oil money to Israel’s physical infrastructure. The India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) is a proposed multinational trade and infrastructure route designed to link India, the Middle East, and Europe.

It was officially announced on September 9, 2023, during the G20 Summit in New Delhi, with heavy backing of the United States as a way to integrate the Middle East economically and physically, pulling partners closer together and countering China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

If completed, UAE oil and goods traveling to Europe would pass through Israeli territory and Israeli ports, generating direct revenue inside Israel and making it a permanent and necessary part of the Gulf’s trade infrastructure.

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz during the US-Iran war added urgency to the construction of this corridor, as the Gulf oil could not be transported through Hormuz. After withdrawal from OPEC regulations, the UAE, which intends to produce 5 million barrels per day by 2027, needs reliable conflict-free export routes.

Why the UAE Israel Relationship Deepened After the Iran War

Now, these are not isolated trade relations between the UAE and Israel. It is a clear and consistent strategic position that Abu Dhabi has been building since 2020 and accelerated sharply during the US-Iran war.

After coming under direct missile and drone attacks from Iran, the UAE’s response clearly reflects the depth of its relationship with Israel.

CNN reported that Israel had sent an Iron Dome air defense system and military personnel to the UAE during the Iran conflict, a direct deployment of Israeli military capability onto Emirati soil to protect UAE territory.

That single fact illustrates how deep the UAE Israel security relationship has become. These are not two countries exchanging trade missions. They are countries protecting each other from a common enemy.

The UAE Energy Minister, when announcing the OPEC exit, confirmed that the decision was made without consulting any other country. Not Saudi Arabia. Not any other OPEC member. The UAE made its most consequential economic decision in decades in alignment with its own strategic priorities that are increasingly centered on Washington and Tel Aviv rather than the Riyadh bloc.

What the OPEC Exit Changes Financially

Under OPEC constraints, the gap between what the UAE was allowed to produce and what it could actually produce was 1.6 million barrels per day.

At $70 per barrel, a conservative estimate (pre-war price), this 1.6 million barrels per day will generate approximately $112 million daily gross revenue and nearly $40 billion in annual gross revenue that had remained unrealized for decades under the OPEC restrictions.

The OPEC exit removes that ceiling, and the UAE’s plan to expand its capacity up to 5 million barrels per day by 2027 is not just a modest expansion but one of the highest-volume oil productions on the planet.

That additional $40 billion gross revenue flows directly into Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth funds, the same funds that have been investing in Israeli technology companies, backing Israeli venture capital, funding joint defence ventures with Israeli military suppliers, and building the trade corridor with Israel.

Read More: Chinese AI Giants Caught in the Crossfire After Meta-Manus Deal Quashed

The Saudi Arabia Factor

Saudi Arabia has watched the growing UAE Israel relationship closely, deepening the bitterness between the relations of these two Gulf states.

The UAE’s OPEC exit without consulting Riyadh was not just an economic decision. It was a signal that Abu Dhabi is no longer coordinating its most important decisions with Riyadh, operating independently and in alignment with a different set of partners, particularly Israel and India.

The UAE’s growing closeness to Israel may push Saudi Arabia to find its own accommodations with regional powers, and its recent defense pact with nuclear-armed Pakistan is a visible case.

Now, the Gulf is not a unified bloc – the UAE is on one side of that split, while Saudi Arabia is managing its position carefully on the other.

The Facts as They Stand

There is no single official document showing Abu Dhabi’s official declaration that its oil revenues move exclusively toward Israel as a matter of stated policy. That document does not exist publicly. What does exist publicly is this.

The UAE has committed $2.3 billion to an Israeli arms company. It has invested in joint ventures with a second Israeli defence company that supplies the Israeli military. It holds a $1.1 billion stake in an Israeli energy company. It led a $105 million investment into an Israeli food technology company.

It has announced a $10 billion dedicated investment fund for Israel. It opened a $30 million Israeli defence technology subsidiary in Abu Dhabi. It has agreed jointly with Israel to manage a trade corridor, and it accepted the deployment of Israeli Iron Dome systems and military personnel on its own soil during the Iran war.

All of this existed before the OPEC exit. All of it was funded by oil revenues before the OPEC exit. The exit unlocks tens of billions more in annual revenue for the same institutions making these investments and signing these deals.

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