معاك نرى المستقبل 🇦🇪
With you we see the future
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Philippines
seen from India
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from South Africa
seen from South Africa

seen from United States
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from United States
معاك نرى المستقبل 🇦🇪
With you we see the future

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Wishing a very Happy Birthday to HON. Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the visionary leader and President of the UAE! 🇦🇪✨ Your dedication, wisdom, and leadership continue to inspire a nation towards greatness. May this year bring you good health, happiness, and prosperity!
📍 Dubai 🇦🇪 | 📞 Call Now: +971 545254356 ✉️ [email protected] 🌐 www.nooralhibatranslation.com 📱 https://www.instagram.com/nooralhibatranslation
UAE’s Security Bubble Is Punctured by Its Role in Yemen War
THE UNITED ARAB EMIRATES has built an economic and political system reliant on its status as a safe harbor in an unstable region. The glittering prosperity and safety of cities like Dubai and Abu Dhabi has enticed people from around the world to live, work, and invest in the small Gulf Arab country — just 150 kilometers from the coast of the Islamic Republic of Iran. The success of the Emirates has often felt like a bit of a miracle: a bubble of exorbitant wealth that has grown in the desert over a few short decades, thanks in large part to the contributions of expatriate workers and professionals. The fragility of this bubble however was highlighted this week, when the war in poverty-stricken Yemen, in which the UAE has taken a prominent role, finally arrived at its doorstep.
Two separate attacks claimed by Yemeni Houthi rebels this month struck the UAE, shattering the image of calm upon which the country’s economic model depends. The first attack, a drone strike on January 17 which hit the airport and a fuel depot in Abu Dhabi, set off explosions that killed three expatriate workers. That attack enraged Emirati leaders, who struck back by bombing a prison in the northern Yemeni city of Saada in an attack that killed dozens. The Houthis seemed undeterred by this retaliation, however, striking the Emirates again this week with a ballistic missile attack aimed at a military base outside Abu Dhabi which is home to thousands of U.S. service personnel.
Images of interceptor missiles lighting up the sky over the city went viral on social media, illustrating just how close the violence of Yemen had come to the wealthy Emirates. The second attack did not result in any casualties, but it further underlined that after several years of outside intervention, the war in Yemen is becoming more, not less, dangerous for the surrounding Gulf Arab states.
The gradual erosion of the UAE’s security bubble is attributable in large part to decisions made by its crown prince, Mohammed bin Zayed, or MBZ, who has charted an aggressive new path for Emirati foreign policy. MBZ has taken a leading role in supporting the Gulf Arab coalition’s war in Yemen, making his nation an active belligerent in a conflict that has devastated the region’s poorest country. The UAE has also fought in recent years in Libya, helping the country earn the nickname “Little Sparta” for its attempts to confront larger powers.
Emirati leaders have traditionally been conservative about their relations with other countries in the region, cognizant of their small size and the fragile nature of their expatriate-driven economic model. Under MBZ, however, the Emirates has sought to become a major player, taking a leading role in foreign military campaigns and aligning itself closely with countries outside the region, like the U.S., to contain regional powers like Turkey and Iran. MBZ has even felt confident enough to break with the traditional Arab consensus on relations with Israel, establishing not just diplomatic contacts but cordial relations with Israeli leaders in the absence of a peace agreement with the Palestinians.
So far, the UAE has been able to reap the benefits of an active foreign policy without paying any of the costs. But the missile attacks from Yemen, whose poverty and suffering are not geographically distant from the opulence of Abu Dhabi, shows there are limits to how far the Emiratis can go on their own. In comments to the New York Times following this week’s ballistic missile attack on the Al Dhafra airbase, individuals connected to the UAE government expressed genuine puzzlement and concern that their country’s involvement in the brutal war in Yemen had rebounded back on it.
“We have to be honest that this is something that we are not used to,” Abdulkhaleq Abdulla, a Dubai-based political scientist, told the Times. “The U.A.E. has maintained a reputation of being a safe haven for investors, visitors and tourists.”
Abdulla expressed confidence that the attacks would not change the Emirates’ reputation as a safe place to live and invest. A sustained period of such attacks, however — should the war in Yemen further spiral out of control, or in the event of a larger conflagration between the U.S., Israel, and Iran — would put the Emirates on the firing line and could do irreversible damage to the country’s status as a safe harbor. Unlike other countries in the region with large native populations, the wealth of the UAE is almost wholly dependent on the millions of expatriates, both rich and poor, who live and work there. If the security upon which the country’s prosperity relies is disturbed, these foreigners will quickly leave for their home countries — taking their money and their skills with them.
There is still time for the UAE’s leaders to change course and return to a traditional path of regional dealmaking and compromise that has helped them preserve domestic peace. Such an approach is still exemplified by the neighboring Sultanate of Oman, which continues to act as a mediator among rivals in the Middle East. Absent that, it will be hard to keep the violence that has tormented the region from Abu Dhabi’s doorstep forever.
For all its many faults, the UAE genuinely has served as a place in the Middle East where people from many backgrounds have been able to live, work, and worship in relative peace. Protecting that political order requires thoughtful leadership as opposed to recklessness and belligerence. The missile attacks this month from Yemen show that the UAE is indeed a bubble, and a fragile one at that.
Mohammed bin Rashid congratulated HH Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed, HH Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, the members of the Supreme Council and the Emiratis for the competitive achievements as UAE is first in the world in 121 indicators, and it tops the Arab countries in 479 indicators.
Positions highlights the humanity of HH Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
The volunteers and the front line of defense working in the COVID-19 Prime Assessment Center at Al Ain Convention Centre took the initiative to thank HH Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, appreciating His Highness’s efforts to launch various initiatives, directives and measures to prevent and limit the spread of the Coronavirus all over the UAE.
کرونا وائرس کے خلاف اپنے ملک کے لیے متحدہ عرب امارات کی طرف سے تعاون پر البانیہ کے وزیر صحت نے ابوظہبی کے ولی عہد محمد بن زید کا شکریہ ادا کیا
مدد کیلیے امدادی طیارہ بھیجنے پر البانیہ کے وزیر صحت نے محمد بن زید کا شکریہ ادا کیا
Fire has been mankind’s steady yet tempestuous companion from the dawn of civilization. Thus, no one should be surprised that our cultural landscape is sprinkled with many references to fire, fueling our imagination, interlocking with history, and filling the airwaves with drama, heroism, and dare. In Taming Fire, Igor Josifov embraces the challenge and proceeds by drawing portraits of iconic figures to engage our intellect, evoke feelings ranging from excitement to anxiety, and walk us down memory lane. He also veers to abstraction and unites contrasting elements, as in the blur series, merging human faces, snowmen, and fireballs. In the process, Josifov unleashes a creative drive and makes the fire submit to his will and whimsy. The allure of this primeval element is magical, intoxicating, and forever intriguing. The seduction borders on danger, destruction, and at the same time dreams of hope, lifted by the flames of shuttle missions dispatched to outer space and the remotest stars. This dual nature of fire suggests an endless reservoir of material for legends and a deep source of fascination for many artists around the world. – Excerpt from the Taming Fire catalog, by Hanna Regev, Contemporary Art Curator and Author Artwork details: AUTHOR: IGOR JOSIFOV NAME OF THE PAINTING: His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan MATERIAL: Fire reflection on linen. DIMENSIONS: 115×115 cm (45x45in) . EXECUTED: In 2019. SHIPPING: United Arab Emirates. . . . Our Benefit Art Auction closes on May 20, 2020 Link in bio to bid & collect your favorite artwork by @igorjosifov . . . #ArtAuction #Benefit #UAE #igorjosifov #MohammedbinZayed # #louvreabudhabi #abudhabi #MBZ #FirePainting #fireprocess #art #tamingfire #firereflection #firepainting #fire #art #artwork #arte #artoftheday #artofvisuals #arts #contemporary #artists #artistsofinstagram #artlife #artlovers #artstagram #artista #artworks #artcollector (at United Arab Emirates) https://www.instagram.com/p/CAVMqaXJORE/?igshid=1g9uouj0ur390