Emirati official confirms UAE will not deploy troops to Gaza

ABU DHABI: The United Arab Emirates (UAE) is not planning to join the international stabilisation force for Gaza because it lacks a clear framework, a senior official said on Monday.

“The UAE does not yet see a clear framework for the stability force, and under such circumstances will probably not participate in such a force,” Emirati presidential adviser Anwar Gargash told the Abu Dhabi Strategic Debate forum.

The US-coordinated international force has been seen as likely to include troops from Egypt, Qatar, and Turkiye, as well as the UAE. Last week, US President Donald Trump said he expected the force to be in Gaza “very soon”, as a fragile ceasefire holds following two years of war.

The oil-rich UAE is one of the few Arab nations with official ties to Israel after signing the Abraham Accords during Trump’s first term in 2020.

The United Arab Emirates does not yet see a clear framework for the proposed international stability force in Gaza and, under the current circumstances, will not take part, a senior Emirati official said on Monday.

Anwar Gargash, diplomatic adviser to the UAE president, said Abu Dhabi would continue to support political efforts toward peace and remain a leading provider of humanitarian aid.

“The region remains fragile, yet there is reason for cautious optimism”, he told the Abu Dhabi Strategic Debate.

The Gaza ceasefire deal aimed at ending hostilities between Israel and Hamas was brokered by the United States, with Egypt, Qatar, and Turkey also mediating. Washington has drafted a United Nations Security Council resolution proposing a two-year mandate for a transitional governance body and an international stabilization force in Gaza.

The force, known as the International Stabilization Force (ISF), would be authorized to “use all necessary measures” to demilitarize Gaza, protect civilians and aid deliveries, secure Gaza’s borders, and support a newly trained Palestinian police force, according to a draft seen by Reuters.

U.S. President Donald Trump said last week that the stabilization force for Gaza would deploy “very soon”, adding that “Gaza is working out very well”.

The U.S. has approached several countries, including Indonesia, the UAE, Egypt, Qatar, Turkey, and Azerbaijan, about contributing to the force, a senior U.S. official had told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Israel has ruled out Turkish participation. Azerbaijan has said it does not plan to send peacekeepers to Gaza unless there is a complete halt to fighting.

Though Washington has ruled out sending U.S. soldiers into Gaza, the U.S. official said around two dozen U.S. troops were in the region in coordination and oversight roles to help prepare for the potential deployment.

Gargash said progress over Gaza depended on reaffirming the principles of the Abraham Accords—dialogue, coexistence, and cooperation—as the only sustainable path to a viable Palestinian state. The UAE, Bahrain, and Morocco established ties with Israel under the Trump-brokered Abraham Accords in 2020.

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