OffsAIde
·28 de março de 2026
Middle East war could reshape Gulf sports investment

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsOffsAIde
·28 de março de 2026

The war in the Middle East could force Qatar and fellow Gulf monarchies to rethink sports spending as defence and security take precedence.
According to L'Équipe, Iran struck the Ras Laffan gas hub on 18 March, heavily damaging facilities and potentially requiring three to five years of repairs. The hit could strip QatarEnergy of 20 billion dollars a year, roughly 17.3 billion euros. Doha described the bombardment as a flagrant breach of sovereignty and a direct threat to its security, but offered no direct reprisals.
Military cooperation with Western powers has left Gulf states protected yet exposed, and sporting calendars have already shifted. The Argentina v Spain Finalissima planned in Doha was cancelled on 15 March. The Qatar MotoGP round set for 12 April is now on eight November, and Formula One removed the Bahrain and Saudi Arabia races scheduled for 12 and 19 April.
Specialists argue that long-term spending on sport, culture and education is tied to defence dependency, so wartime priorities could reset how these countries allocate budgets. Clientelist sports policies may be reassessed after the conflict.
Slowdowns had already started, with Saudi Arabia trimming Neom and the 2029 Asian Winter Games moving to Kazakhstan. Riyadh targets Expo 2030 and is likely to pursue the World Cup four years later. Overseas flagships such as Paris Saint-Germain, owned by QSI, are viewed as safer and, in some views, unaffected, with QSI a subsidiary rather than a sovereign fund like QIA, PIF or Mubadala.
Source: L'Équipe









































