Indo-Abrahamic Alliance
India, Israel, the United States, and the United Arab Emirates. The lead architect of the Indo-Abrahamic Alliance, Mohammed Soliman intended for his concept to "transform regional geopolitics and geo-economics of [West Asia], and finally allow Washington to do more with less in the region. Such a partnership, linking the Indo-Abrahamic bloc with the US Indo-Pacific strategy, shores up an overarching Asian order". | |
| Abbreviation | I2U2 |
|---|---|
| Established | 2021 |
| Type | Inter-governmental security forum |
Region | West Asia |
| Members |
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The Indo-Abrahamic Alliance, sometimes known as The Indo-Abrahamic Block or The Middle East QUAD or The Western QUAD or West Asian QUAD or I2-U2, is a geostrategic term coined by the foreign policy thinker and grand strategist Mohammed Soliman in use for a long essay for the Middle East Institute. The Indo-Abrahamic term refers to the growing convergence of geopolitical interests among India, Israel, and the United Arab Emirates, which will create a regional bloc that would include Egypt and Saudi Arabia and eventually fill in the gap left by a future US withdrawal from the Middle East, representing a counterbalance to Turkey and Iran. The Biden Administration later adopted Soliman's Indo-Abrahamic concept by launching the I2U2 Group in October 2021, which was followed by a leaders-level summit in July 2022.