Commodities March 5, 2026

Moscow Accuses U.S. and Israel of Pushing Gulf States into Broader Middle East Fight

Kremlin charges Washington and Tel Aviv with provoking Iranian strikes that have hit oil infrastructure and Arab Gulf nations

By Jordan Park
Moscow Accuses U.S. and Israel of Pushing Gulf States into Broader Middle East Fight

Russia has publicly accused the United States and Israel of attempting to pull Arab Gulf countries into a wider regional conflict by provoking Iran into retaliatory strikes. Moscow says Iranian drone and missile attacks have followed air strikes by the United States and Israel and that these attacks have struck oil infrastructure and caused human and material losses in Gulf states. President Vladimir Putin has offered to use Russia's contacts with Tehran to convey Moscow's concerns to Iran.

Key Points

  • Russia accuses the United States and Israel of provoking Iran into retaliatory strikes that hit targets in Arab Gulf states.
  • Iranian drone and missile attacks reportedly followed U.S. and Israeli air strikes on Iran, with Russian officials saying oil infrastructure across the region has been struck.
  • President Putin spoke by phone with leaders of four Arab Gulf states and offered to use Moscow's ties to Iran to convey concerns regarding Tehran's strikes.

Moscow on Thursday levelled strong accusations at the United States and Israel, saying both countries have sought to draw Arab Gulf states into a broader Middle East conflict by provoking Iran into carrying out strikes across the region.

The Russian Foreign Ministry said the recent pattern of events - which it described as deliberate provocation - resulted in Iran launching drone and missile attacks that have struck targets in some Arab countries in the Gulf. Those states, the ministry noted, are close U.S. allies, and several also maintain significant ties with Russia.

Russian officials tied the escalation to air strikes launched by the United States and Israel on Iran on Saturday. According to the ministry, the subsequent Iranian strikes caused both human and material losses, including damage to oil infrastructure in the region.

President Vladimir Putin intervened diplomatically earlier in the week, speaking by phone on Monday with leaders of four Arab Gulf states. In those discussions, Putin offered to use Moscow's lines of communication with Iran to relay concerns about Tehran's strikes on oil infrastructure across the region.

The Foreign Ministry issued a statement on Thursday that directly blamed Washington and Tel Aviv for what it called an effort to drag Arab Gulf states into a wider conflagration. "They deliberately provoked Iran into retaliatory strikes against targets in some Arab countries, which led to human and material losses, which the Russian side deeply regrets," the ministry said. "In doing so, they (Washington and Tel Aviv) are trying to drag the Arabs into a war for someone else’s interests."

The Russian message framed the recent round of strikes and counterstrikes as part of a sequence of actions that, in Moscow's view, risks widening the scope of the conflict across the Middle East. Moscow's statement and Putin's outreach to Gulf leaders reflect a diplomatic effort to position Russia as a conduit for concerns between Iran and affected Gulf states.

The situation described by Russian officials centers on four linked elements set out by the ministry: the initial air strikes on Iran by the United States and Israel on Saturday; subsequent Iranian drone and missile attacks on targets in several Arab Gulf states; resulting human and material losses including damage to oil infrastructure; and Moscow's assertion that Washington and Tel Aviv intended to pull Gulf states into a larger war.


Summary

Russia has accused the United States and Israel of deliberate actions intended to provoke Iran into striking Arab Gulf states, producing human and material losses and damage to oil infrastructure. President Putin has offered to use Russia's contacts with Iran to communicate concerns to Tehran, while the Russian Foreign Ministry publicly blamed Washington and Tel Aviv for trying to draw the Arabs into a wider war.

Risks

  • Risk of escalation into a wider regional conflict - this primarily affects geopolitical stability and defense sectors.
  • Damage to oil infrastructure from strikes - this poses risks to energy and commodities markets as well as companies involved in oil production and transport.

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