President Trump's 2026 National Defense Strategy marked a clear America First pivot: prioritize homeland defense, deter China through strength, end endless wars, and insist on real burden-sharing from capable allies.
Now is the time to supercharge it with targeted amendments that expand the Abraham Accords into a robust, integrated security network. This would turn the Middle East into a region where local partners take primary responsibility for deterring Iranian reconstitution and its proxies — freeing U.S. forces to focus on higher-priority threats.
As President Trump outlined in his Riyadh speech, the United States seeks a peaceful, prosperous Middle East where capable partners lead their own defense.
Here are the proposed amendments to the NDS:
Line of Effort 3 (Burden-Sharing): "DoW will enable deeper integration among Israel and our expanded Abraham Accords network—including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Iraq, Kuwait, Oman, and Jordan—extending to cooperative security zones in Syria, Greece, and Cyprus. Priorities include trilateral/multilateral exercises, shared intelligence fusion centers, and co-production of integrated air/missile defense (e.g., extending Iron Dome architectures Gulf-wide). These partners will align with the global 5% GDP defense standard, leading deterrence against Iranian reconstitution and proxies like the Houthis. U.S. support will emphasize arms transfers, joint training, and technology sharing—freeing Joint Forces for Homeland and Indo-Pacific priorities while securing World and American energy flows and counterterrorism objectives."
Iran Section: "Abraham Accords expansions have forged a robust anti-Iranian coalition spanning Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Iraq, Kuwait, Oman, Jordan, and forward areas in Syria, Greece, and Cyprus. This network, post-Operation Midnight Hammer, multiplies denial capabilities against proxy rebuilds. DoW will facilitate interoperability via pre-positioned U.S. munitions and rapid-response training, without permanent footprints, ensuring allies handle routine threats independently."
This is not about new U.S. combat commitments. It's smart leverage: America supplies high-end technology, training, and pre-positioned stocks; regional partners provide the manpower, basing, logistics, and frontline deterrence.
Tiered Partnership Roles for Maximum Impact
Partner Group Core Contributions U.S. Contribution Key Benefits Core (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Israel) Advanced missile defense, air superiority, intelligence fusion Co-production & joint exercises Layered regional shields Gulf Enablers (Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman) Logistics, basing, air operations Tech transfers & spending alignment Secure energy flows & rapid response Edge States (Iraq, Jordan) Ground intel, border security vs. proxies Targeted training & arms support Stabilized frontiers Forward Zones (Syria, Greece, Cyprus) Denial operations, Mediterranean depth Pre-positioned stocks (no combat troops) Broader layered deterrence
| Partner Group | Core Contributions | U.S. Contribution | Key Benefits |
|---|---|---|---|
| Core (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Israel) | Advanced missile defense, air superiority, intelligence fusion | Co-production & joint exercises | Layered regional shields |
| Gulf Enablers (Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman) | Logistics, basing, air operations | Tech transfers & spending alignment | Secure energy flows & rapid response |
| Edge States (Iraq, Jordan) | Ground intel, border security vs. proxies | Targeted training & arms support | Stabilized frontiers |
| Forward Zones (Syria, Greece, Cyprus) | Denial operations, Mediterranean depth | Pre-positioned stocks (no combat troops) | Broader layered deterrence |
Post-Operation Midnight Hammer — which delivered severe damage to Iran's nuclear facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan — the timing is right. Iran's regime and proxies are degraded but still dangerous. A coordinated regional network can preempt threats like Houthi attacks or Hezbollah rebuilds more effectively than the U.S. acting alone.
This aligns perfectly with the 2026 NDS priorities: burden-shifting so capable allies handle their own backyard, while the U.S. maintains the decisive edge in the Indo-Pacific and homeland defense. NATO is already moving toward the Hague 5% defense spending standard. Wealthy Gulf partners with direct stakes in energy security and counterterrorism can — and should — do the same.
The result? Safer energy routes, reduced regional terrorism, conserved American resources, and stronger deterrence without endless U.S. footprints.
This proposal turns the NDS from a solid foundation into a true force multiplier across theaters. It's realism in action: peace through strength, delivered by partners who have the greatest incentive to succeed.
What do you think? Should the administration and Congress incorporate these targeted updates into NDS implementation?
I'd welcome insights from defense policy experts, former officials, and regional analysts. Let's discuss how to make burden-sharing work in practice while advancing shared prosperity in the Middle East.
#NationalDefenseStrategy, #AbrahamAccords, #MiddleEastSecurity, #BurdenSharing, #AmericaFirst, #DefensePolicy
Source:
https://media.defense.gov/2026/Jan/23/2003864773/-1/-1/0/2026-NATIONAL-DEFENSE-STRATEGY.PDF
