#تاريخنا_الاجتماعي
تحت هذه التغريدة سرد تاريخي لتحولات عباءة المرأة السعودية، منذ الخمسينات وحتى نهاية العقد الأول من الألفية (٢٠١٠) احفظها وأعد ارسالها إن كانت من اهتماماتك..
شخص يعترض القوات الأمنية ويمنعهم من التفتيش مدعيًا سيطرته على المنطقة.
تصرف العميد يعكس أخلاق العسكري وإنسانيته كلمة سيدي ما صغرته انما كبرت مشاعر محتاجة لجبر خاطرها
.. شاهد الفيديو.
نسأل الله عز وجل ان يجعل ماقدمه هذا الشيخ الفاضل وأسرته الكريمه في موازين حسناتهم وان يبارك في بنتنا الغاليه علينا جميعا موقف يدل علي طيبة وكرم الشعب السعودي العظيم 🫡🫡🫡
JUST IN: Everyone is asking who wins this war. The answer is not in Tehran or Washington. It is in Riyadh.
Saudi Arabia is emerging from the Hormuz crisis as the undisputed strategic beneficiary while Dubai absorbs the physical damage. This is the rebalancing of Gulf power that no one is modelling and everyone will be pricing within months.
Dubai has been struck repeatedly since February 28. A fuel tank fire at the international airport. Airspace closures. Over 23,000 flights cancelled. Fertiglobe, one of the world’s largest nitrogen producers at 6.6 million tonnes annual capacity, operates from UAE soil that is now under persistent drone and missile threat. The 314 ballistic missiles and 1,672 drones launched at the UAE have not collapsed the country. Its air defenses hold. But they have damaged something harder to rebuild than a fuel tank: the perception of safety that made Dubai the world’s business hub.
Saudi Arabia has absorbed far less direct targeting. The Saudi-Pakistan Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement, signed September 17, 2025, created a military depth that Iran respected even before the war began. Pakistan’s naval assets and nuclear deterrent backstop make direct Saudi targeting exponentially more costly for Iran than striking the UAE. Riyadh calculated this correctly.
Now layer the infrastructure.
Vision 2030 is not a slogan. It is $1.3 trillion of committed capital building cities, entertainment districts, tourism corridors, and industrial zones on a blank slate. NEOM, the Red Sea project, Diriyah Gate, the Qiddiya entertainment complex. None of these have been struck. None carry the insurance repricing that Dubai’s commercial real estate and aviation hub now face. The 2034 World Cup requires stadiums, transport networks, and hospitality infrastructure that is already being built on a timeline that extends well beyond this war.
Every dollar of international capital that hesitates on Dubai because of drone footage is a dollar that considers Riyadh instead. That is not speculation. It is the mechanism by which wars redistribute commercial gravity. The 2003 Iraq war shifted regional banking from Beirut to Dubai. The 2026 Iran war may shift it from Dubai to Riyadh.
The fertilizer dimension makes Saudi ascendancy structural rather than cyclical.
Saudi Arabia controls significant phosphate reserves. Ma’aden, the state mining company, is one of the world’s largest phosphate producers. With Hormuz blocking Gulf urea and ammonia exports from the UAE and Qatar, and China suspending phosphate exports through August, Saudi overland and Red Sea export routes become the only major non-disrupted nutrient pathway accessible to global buyers. NOLA urea at $683 per ton and FAO projecting 100 to 200 million additional people at acute hunger risk means demand for alternative supply is existential, not optional.
Saudi Arabia did not start this war. It pressed Washington to finish it. Reuters confirmed on March 16, citing three Gulf sources and five diplomats, that all six GCC states are urging the US not to stop short. Abdulaziz Sager, chairman of the Gulf Research Center, said Iran crossed every red line. The Gulf wants Iran permanently degraded. Saudi wants something more specific: a region in which its infrastructure, its pacts, its phosphate, and its capital absorb the flows that used to go through a strait it no longer needs to depend on.
The bombs fell on Iran. The drones fell on Dubai. The capital is flowing to Riyadh. And the fertilizer leverage that feeds the next decade of Saudi influence is being locked in by a planting season that closes in four weeks.
https://t.co/iFmUcarGdV
لم نسمع لا انفجار ولا صراخ
لم نشعر الا بالامن و الامان
خلف هذا الامن معالي الفريق الركن مزيد بن سليمان العمرو قائد قوات الدفاع الجوي الملكي السعودي وابطالنا ابطال الدفاع الجوي 🇸🇦