The United Arab Emirates (UAE) abruptly quit the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) earlier this month, a major foreign policy victory for President Donald Trump, the American people, and global free markets.
After nearly six decades of membership, Abu Dhabi gave the oil cartel just three days’ notice. It reportedly didn’t consult with Saudi Arabia beforehand and simply announced in the cryptic language of a sovereign nation done explaining itself that the decision “is based on our national interest.”
The sudden exit of OPEC’s third-largest oil producer is a validation of President Trump’s strategic diplomacy dating back to his first term. He praised the UAE’s decision, telling reporters, “Ultimately it’s a good thing for getting the price of gas down, getting oil down, getting everything down.”
Trump previously accused OPEC of “ripping off the rest of the world.” He argued that many of its members receive U.S. military protection “for nothing” while they’re simultaneously “exploiting” American consumers. International policymakers have also long described the group as a cartel manipulating global oil prices for their own gain.
OPEC was founded in the 1960s to regulate oil prices by coordinating increases or decreases in production. Its member states, led by Saudi Arabia, control roughly 80 percent of global oil reserves and nearly 40 percent of all crude oil production. That significant influence has allowed them to dictate global oil prices to maximize profits.
But OPEC was never just an economic arrangement – it is a political entity as well.
The cartel began flexing its power almost immediately after its founding. OPEC imposed a unified embargo against the U.S. as retaliation for supporting Israel’s 1973 Yom Kippur War. This exposed American dependence on foreign oil, straining the economy and quadrupling gas prices.
After successfully coercing America once, OPEC never stopped.
For decades, the solidarity of OPEC member nations translated to real leverage over the United States. When OPEC restricted supply, American drivers felt it. When the cartel held the line on production, oil prices rose, inflation followed, and American presidents found themselves in the awkward position of hat-in-hand diplomacy with nations that have few incentives to cooperate with Washington.
The oil cartel’s real power was in its demonstrated ability to force American consumers and American policymakers to react to decisions made abroad.
So, why would the UAE break ranks now?
The answer begins with one of Trump’s most consequential foreign-policy achievements. During his first term, he pushed Arab states to move beyond the stale assumptions of the old Middle East to forge economic, diplomatic, and security relations with Israel. That effort produced the Abraham Accords in 2020, including full normalization of relations between Israel and the UAE – something many foreign policy experts previously thought impossible.
Although much of the media treated the agreement as a sideshow, it subtly changed the balance of power in the region. The UAE no longer had to see its future only through the lens of Saudi-led oil politics or OPEC discipline. It now had a serious economic and security partnership outside the cartel.
That new reality was tested during the Iran War. When Iranian attacks threatened UAE energy infrastructure, Abu Dhabi learned that the Saudis and the old OPEC order could not provide the security it needed, but Israel could. Israel responded to the call for help by sending Iron Dome batteries and personnel to the UAE to defend against the attacks, a remarkable first.
That strategic partnership was possible only because of Trump’s Abraham Accords.
Within a couple of months, the lesson was obvious for the UAE. Its future security would come less from the fiction of cartel solidarity and more from partnerships with Israel and the United States. This gave the UAE room to accelerate its plans to act on its longstanding frustrations with OPEC’s production quotas.
Over the years, Abu Dhabi’s innovations increased oil production capacity to roughly five million barrels per day. But under the cartel’s quota system, it was permitted to produce only around three million barrels per day. That enormous gap represents billions in foregone revenue, and a national energy investment held hostage to collective decisions outside the UAE’s control.
Staying inside OPEC meant watching those investments sit idle while the Saudis, increasingly at odds with the UAE on everything from OPEC leadership to geopolitics, effectively imposed a ceiling on the UAE’s prosperity. Instead of providing a vision for the future, OPEC had become a production quota straitjacket, and the UAE decided it was done wearing it.
The UAE energy minister was uncharacteristically candid in explaining the country’s sudden departure. “The decision to be outside any constraint,” he told reporters, “is something that is important for us to ensure that we are attaining market condition… we believe that the world is currently undersupplied.”
The global free market should see more oil production in the months and years ahead because of the UAE’s actions. And it is all made possible, in large part, by a Trump diplomatic strategy half a decade in the making.
The backdrop of the 2020 Abraham Accords makes clear the triggers of this OPEC crack-up. A country that has now staked its security on its relationship with Washington and Jerusalem has limited incentive to remain in an institution whose primary purpose is to constrain supply and keep oil prices elevated – the very outcome that Trump previously accused OPEC of engineering at America’s expense.
Critics will point out that the immediate oil market impact may be modest. Shipping lanes through the Strait of Hormuz remain constrained, and Abu Dhabi cannot simply open the taps overnight. But fixating on the short-term barrel count is like watching a dam develop cracks and concluding that nothing has changed because the water is still mostly behind it.
Cartels do not collapse in a day; they erode one frustrated member at a time. The UAE’s departure plants a question in the mind of nearly every other OPEC member that produces below capacity and watches its quota frustrations compound year after year: why not us next? If even two or three of them arrive at the same conclusion Abu Dhabi just did, the cartel’s ability to pressure the United States will be finished.
The OPEC of 2026 now commands a far smaller share of global output than it did in 1973. American shale broke OPEC’s monopoly on the supply side, another accomplishment of the Trump administration. And now, thanks in part to the Abraham Accords, one of the Middle East’s savviest oil producers has decided that the future belongs to those who compete rather than collude.
W.J. Lee has served in the White House, NASA, on multiple campaigns, and in nearly all levels of government.


This is great news. Thank you UAE and President Trump.
OPEC started with presumably good intentions, but like all unions do, became a political monstrosity wielding unreasonable power over others, much akin to our labor unions and teacher unions.
(Abolish those, too.)
Sadly, ant accomplishments under the Trump administration will be “Crickets” in the media.
Having a peaceful middle eat that wants to cooperate and be part of the rest of the world is a GREAT thing. When enough middle east countries stop their silly anti-Israel stuff, life will get much better for the entire world. MUST deal with Iran though and Trump is the ONLY President who has had the balls to do it. Wish we hadn’t done the cease-fire though, it would probably be over already. Most Big Satan Americans don’t realize just how easy it would have been for Iran to take a dirty nuke and set off an EMP from a tanker ship hiding in plain sight in the Gulf of America. 1800’s living in a blink of an eye. And all OUR missiles are still pointed at Russia facing north.
This is great, break up the cartel from within. Maybe its collusion days are over.
Thanks AMAC, this article gives us encouragement. Thanks to President Trump, a business man that can see the big picture
This was a very easy message and so good. i felt like smiling after reading it for a change. May wiser people come forth in that part of the world.
Heidi
Very informative, welcome article. It is aggravating to note the typical Washington response to the designs and behaviors of other leaders is to produce detailed public pronouncements, rather than quietly work behind scenes to address and mitigate problems of collusive coopearation between foreign suppliers of essential products and services. In this instance, simply increasing America’s own oil production capacity, quietly, would have sent an appropriate message to the others. We can manage without their “contribution” to our financial outlook.
Now can other states leave OPEC ??
UAE is also doing some attacks on Iran! God for them. A nuclear Iran is as big a danger to them as to us!
OPEC like NATO all thought they could dictate to the member nations their policy. Till Trump came and said you nations have to contribute or America is leaving. OPEC is going through the same thing. The UAE has taking this step for their own economy.
President Trump showed them what can be done with the Abram’s Accord. Israel helped with protection during Operation Epic Fury. And Israel came through with protecting the UAE. Not OPEC they raised the prices instead. OPEC will learn with this withdrawal they are not going to be able to dictate the oil prices much longer.
OPEC will cease to exist as a powerhouse. Like NATO in Europe.
Finally something to be glad of, events that took place while Jimmy slept have consequences we are dealing with today..
Little by little,step by step,PRESISIDENT TRUMP is getting things done and the liberal,leftist,socialist,big M democrats really hate when AMERICA forges ahead.If the democrats are”bitchin”,TRUMPS doing his job.
Excellent article! Good information and very well-written.
Awesome article! Thank you AMAC, As someone posted earlier this article truly provides us encouragement! After reading I too felt “at last we have someone who can see the whole picture and thank you President Trump for doing just that. This was an excellent article and I felt relief not frustration after reading . Kudos to the author
Excellent! Praying other OPEC members come to their senses,
this is great, it’s nice knowing that the UAE finally realized that being in OPEC is not necessarily a good thing,in fact it was holding them back.now what we have to do is hope that HOA’s suffer the same thing,they’re no good for anything either.
Great article, however it’s my understanding that America has far more oil than anyone. So, I ask the question, why don’t we do exactly what the UAE did? I also submit that there is absolutely no reason for our gas prices to have gone up one penny due to the Iran war. Oil company profits are through the roof. US oil should be selling near $50/barrel while paying no attention to OPEC!
Thank you for reporting this as it has gotten very little attention.
It seems many people think the poor decisions of past administrations can be changed in a few weeks. It took years to become so dependent on foreign oil and OPEC, and it will take quite a bit of time to build our oil stores up to proper levels and get things back on a positive track. We have a long way to go to return to previous levels of oil production. As they say, Rome wasn’t built in a day.
Price fixing never has a good outcome.
OPEC is running out of “Gas” in a way beneficial for the world! Hopefully this will fuel other members into leaving it as well!
Im loving it! The alliances of Ezekiel 38 are falling into place, just as written.
It’s about time. One word in the article says it all. The CARTEL. It seems a lot of things are changing for America’s benefit. Thank you Lord!
Not really. Trump’s huge victory are our gas prices $4.50/gal and rising, rising grocery and other commodities prices with no end in sight. I voted for him three times, but his management of this war makes me very much disappointed.