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Something DARK Happened to ISLAM in UK – Now Even Arabs Are TERRIFIED Of It!

Even the UAE doesn’t trust Britain  anymore.

Not on trade, not on security, on Islam.

A country that designates the Muslim  Brotherhood as a terrorist organization.

A country whose president graduated from Sandhurst is now  telling its own citizens that British universities   are too dangerous to study at.

And when one of  America’s closest Gulf partners looks at parts of Britain and says something has gone very  wrong here, you know this isn’t a small story.

It’s the kind of story that flips everything you  thought you knew about who’s worried about radical Islam in Europe.

Because we’re not talking  about the usual suspects.

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Not the French,   not the Germans, not even the Hungarians.

We’re talking about the Arab Gulf State, one of the most powerful in the region,  quietly pulling its students out of the country   that’s supposed to be one of the safest,  prestigious places on Earth to get a degree.

The signal couldn’t be louder.

The UAE has been  watching what’s happening on British campuses   for years.

And what we found out about why they  finally moved and what they’re finally afraid of explains far more about the state of Britain in  2026 than any politician will admit out loud.

Let’s start where this trust used to be  unbreakable.

For decades, Britain was seen as one of the safest prestigious places in the  world to study.

Oxford, Cambridge, Imperial, UCL, the London School of Economics.

names that  opened doors in every government, boardroom,   every embassy from Riyad to Jakarta.

And nowhere  did that prestige matter more than in the Gulf.

Wealthy Arab families sent their sons and  daughters to British universities for generations.

The connection wasn’t just educational.

It was  strategic, personal.

The current UAE president, Shik Muhammad bin Zed al- Nayan, graduated  from the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst,   in 1976.

Half of the leadership class across  the Gulf was trained at British institutions.

Britain wasn’t just exporting degrees.

It was  exporting influence.

Soft power packaged as a graduation gown.

But the numbers tell the story.

By 2024, the number of UAE students on UK campuses had doubled compared to 2017, climbing to  around 8,100.

The UAE government picked up   the bill for thousands of those students through  generous federal scholarships covering tuition, living expenses, travel, even health insurance.

It was one of the most reliable Gulf student   pipelines in the Western world.

This wasn’t  a transactional relationship.

This was trust built up over decades, reinforced by family  ties, military partnerships, royal visits.

As recently as October of 2024, Prime  Minister Kier Starmer and Shik Muhammad personally deepened bilateral ties  through a series of highle meetings.

Britain was supposed to be a safe option, the  reliable option, the option that you didn’t have to think twice about.

So when one of the  UK’s closest Gulf partners suddenly started   pulling back quietly, without announcement,  without explanation, people in Whiteall noticed, but not for the reason they expected.

Because  the first warning sign wasn’t a press conference, it was the visa data.

In the year ending September  2025, only 213 Emirati students were granted UK study visas.

That was a 27% drop yearonear and  a brutal 55% drop from where the figure had been in 2022.

For a Gulf state with money, ambition,  and one of the highest rates of outbound student mobility in the world, the UAE has more  than 18,600 of its citizens studying abroad.

That kind of collapse doesn’t happen by accident.

something inside the UAE government had decided   that British universities weren’t worth funding  anymore.

But here’s the thing, nobody in London knew why.

There was no announcement, no  scandal, no public spat.

UK officials,   when later asked by the Financial Times, admitted  that they weren’t even sure how comprehensive the pullback was.

Some UAE military personnel were  still receiving scholarships to study in Britain.

Wealthy Emirati families were still sending  their kids over and footing the bill themselves.

But whatever was happening was happening behind  closed doors, inside Abu Dhabi, inside ministries,   inside meetings that nobody was leaking from.

For  months, that’s where it stayed.

A quiet drain.

Hundreds of scholarships non-renewed.

Students  redirected to American, Australian, French, even Israeli universities instead.

But quiet decisions  inside Gulf governments didn’t stay quiet forever.

especially not when the country involved is a  NATO aligned partner that hosts US air bases, fields US and French fighter jets, and sits at  the heart of every major Middle East deal of the   last decade.

By the middle of 2025, somebody in  the UAE made a move that turned a quiet pullback into something much harder to ignore.

A move  that wasn’t designed to embarrass Britain,   but it was designed to make sure that no Emirati  student would ever ask why.

In June 2025, the UAE’s Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific  Research published a document.

It looked routine, a revised list of foreign universities whose  degrees would be officially recognized inside the   UAE, and whose students would qualify for state  scholarships.

The criteria were straightforward.

To make the list, a university had to rank in the  top 200 globally, outside the United States, and   Australia.

The kind of bureaucratic filter that  international education ministries put together every few years.

Universities from the United  States made the cut.

Australian universities   made the cut.

French universities made the cut.

Again, even Israeli universities made the cut.

But Britain didn’t.

Not Oxford, not  Cambridge, not Imperial, not UCL, not LSE.

Around 64 UK universities sit in the global top  200, easily enough to qualify on paper.

But every single one of them was missing.

For weeks, almost  nobody noticed.

The list was published in Arabic,   buried inside a routine ministral update.

The kind  of administrative announcement that almost never makes the international press.

But then in early  January of 26, the Financial Times broke the story wide open.

And what their sources said about why  Britain was missing made the silence make sense.

This wasn’t an oversight.

This was deliberate.

A  person directly involved in the decision told the   FT in a line that would echo around the world,  they don’t want their kids to be radicalized on campus.

Then the UAE went one step further.

The country announced that it would no longer   recognize degrees from institutions that weren’t  on the approved list, meaning a British degree in the eyes of the UAE government was about to  become worth less than the paper it was printed on   for any returning Emirati graduate.

A British  degree.

The very same British degree that helped build half the leadership class of the modern  Gulf.

Suddenly now less valuable than a degree   from a country that didn’t even formally exist  as a sovereign state until the 20th century.

That is how fast a reputation can be torn down.

Hey, if you’re following this, hit subscribe to   Fall of Nations because what we found out  about why the UAE made this call, what they were actually afraid of, what their intelligence  services have been tracking on British campuses,   and why London still refuses to act is where the  story turns dark.

Because the official UK data, the data the UAE were looking at, tells a story  that Whiteall hasn’t wanted to talk about.

In the 2023 2024 academic year, 70 students at British  universities were flagged for potential referral to prevent the UK’s flagship dradicalization  program over signs of Islamist radicalization.

That figure was nearly double the previous  year’s number.

Look, that alone wouldn’t be   enough to trigger a Gulf government.

Britain has  nearly 3 million students in higher education.

70 is a pretty tiny number in absolute terms.

But  the trajectory was what mattered.

The Office for Students, Britain’s higher education regulator,  published its own data covering the same year, and those numbers were harder to dismiss.

Universities escalated 265 cases to the point where a prevent officer had to get involved.

That was up from 210 the year before, which was almost double the figure from 2020 and 2021.

Of  those escalated cases, 27 were tied to Islamist radicalization concerns.

The number of Islamist  linked cases at UK universities had jumped by 75% in a single year.

75% in one year.

And that’s  only the cases that got reported.

According to academics quoted in Times Higher Education, plenty  of staff are too afraid to flag concerns at all.

One academic told the publication that lecturers  are absolutely terrified to express their opinions   when students from a certain demographic are in  the lecture hall.

Think about what that sentence actually means.

The people whose entire job  is to critique, interrogate, challenge ideas,   the academics are too scared to do their  jobs.

Not because of administrative pressure, not because of budget cuts, but because of who is  sitting in the lecture hall.

This is not a fringe   complaint.

This is a regulator’s data sitting  on a government desk showing a clear pattern.

And the UAE’s intelligence services, which  have spent the last decade tracking the   Muslim Brotherhood across Europe, were watching  every single number.

They weren’t just looking at the official figures.

They were looking at what  happened when Emirati students came home.

The Gulf   States have something that Western governments  don’t have.

They have a return pipeline.

Every Emirati student who studies abroad eventually  comes back to Abu Dhabi or Dubai or Sharah.

And what some of them brought back, according  to UAE security sources, was quite concerning.

Not all of them, not even most of them, but enough  that somebody started keeping a list.

For the UAE, the math was simple.

If you send 8,500 of your  citizens, many of them on government scholarships, into a university system where Islamic  radicalization referrals are climbing 75% a year and where university staff are afraid to raise  the alarm, you’re paying for the radicalization   of your own next generation.

So, the UAE did  something that Western governments wouldn’t.

It decided the risk wasn’t worth taking, and it  pulled the plug.

And in doing so, it sent a signal that landed harder than any sanctions package or  diplomatic demos could have.

The signal was this.

Britain, which had spent half a century lecturing  the Arab world about human rights, free speech, tolerance, was now in the eyes of Abu Dhabi  exporting the very ideology that the Gulf had been trying to contain.

That’s not an academic concern.

That’s a security concern.

And it’s coming from   people who know political Islam from the inside.

To understand why the UAE moved like this, you have to understand what the Muslim Brotherhood  actually means to them.

Because in Abu Dhabi,   this isn’t an abstract debate.

In November 2014,  the UAE designated the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist organization.

It was part of a broader  move that put 82 different groups onto the UAE’s terror list.

The decision wasn’t symbolic.

The  Brotherhood is treated inside the UAE the same way that al-Qaeda is treated, inside the same  way that ISIS is treated.

The full force of UAE counterterror laws apply.

Because Emirati leaders  see the Brotherhood as an existential threat, not because of the bombs, but because of ideology.

The Brotherhood’s argument is that society should   be governed according to Islamic religious  principles.

And that argument, if accepted, dismantles the entire model that the Gulf  monarchies have built.

It dismantles the basis   on which the ruling families rule.

It threatens  everything that the UAE has spent 50 years constructing.

a hypermodern, hyperstable  oil-funded society that exports Emirates airlines and imports global investment.

So when  Shik Muhammad bin Zed has spent over a decade asking Western governments to take the same step  to ban the Brotherhood, to designate it, to cut   off its funding networks, and Western governments  have refused.

Well, he hasn’t been crying wolf.

He’s been warning Europe about something that he  watches every day.

He’s been trying to get the   West to read its own intelligence files.

Britain  ran its own review in 2015 led by John Jenkins, a former British ambassador to Saudi Arabia.

The  review found, and this is the British government’s   own conclusion, not a UAE talking point, that  aspects of brotherhood ideology and tactics both inside the UK and overseas were quote contrary to  our values and contrary to our national interests and our national security.

That was the review.

The British government read it and they chose not to ban the group.

11 years on and Prime Minister  Kier Starmer has said the matter remains under close review.

Yeah, 11 years of close  review.

The UAE has heard that song before.

And it’s not just the UAE saying so anymore.

In  2025, the French Interior Ministry commissioned   a major report on the Muslim Brotherhood’s  activities inside Europe.

The report concluded that the Brotherhood was running organized  influence operations across EU institutions using youth networks, community organizations,  and EU funding programs to shape policy debates.

France isn’t the UAE.

France is a European liberal  democracy.

And France was sounding the same alarm.

Two governments on different continents with very  different politics looking at the same network   and reaching the same conclusion.

Britain’s  position is starting to look very lonely.

But the scholarship blacklist isn’t happening in  isolation.

It’s the most visible flash point in a UK UAE relationship that’s been quietly fracturing  for 2 years.

Let’s start with the money.

In November 2023, an Abu Dhabi backed consortium  tried to buy the Daily Telegraph, one of Britain’s most influential newspapers, the paper that has  set the tone for British conservatism for over a   century.

The bid was blocked, then unwound by the  British government on national security grounds.

After a political backlash about a  foreign state buying a UK political daily,   the UAE didn’t take it well.

Abu Dhabi had paid  roughly 600 million pounds upfront in expectation that the deal would close, and London told them  no.

Then you’ve got Manchester City.

The English   Premier League champions are owned by a member of  the Abu Dhabi royal family, and the club has been fighting an unprecedented set of charges from  the league over alleged financial breaches.

Every step of that case has played out in British  courts and British headlines with the UAE on the receiving end.

From Abu Dhabi’s perspective, the  most successful golf back club in football history is being publicly humiliated by the British  establishment.

And then you’ve got Sudan.

The UK has openly raised concerns about  UAE backing for the rapid support forces, a paramilitary group accused of atrocities in  Sudan’s civil war.

The UAE denies any involvement, but the accusations sit in British parliamentary  debates, in foreign office briefings, and in the international press.

British MPs have stood up in  the House of Commons and named the UAE directly.

Each one of these on its own would be manageable  diplomatic friction.

But together, they explain   why the UAE was already cold by the time that  it published that ministry list.

The blacklist wasn’t a thunderclap from a clear sky.

It was a  cumulative result of two years of bruises.

Then American politicians piled in.

United States Vice  President JD Vance posted on social media that it was an absolutely insane headline that some of our  best Muslim allies in the Gulf think the Islamic indoctrination in certain parts of the West is too  dangerous.

That post landed in January 2026 and it turned a UK UAE story into a transatlantic talking  point.

Now here’s the twist that nobody saw coming.

While the UAE is pulling its students out  of British universities, British universities are   going the other way.

The University of Manchester  operates a campus in Dubai.

So does Harry Owan.

UK higher education institutions have aggressively  expanded into the UAE, selling degrees on Emirati soil under Emirati regulatory oversight.

The Gulf  still wants UK education, just not on UK soil.

Because the Britain the UAE is walking away  from isn’t the Britain that it used to know.

The university sector is in crisis.

According  to Russell Group analysis, around 43% of English universities forecast deficits for the 2024  2025 financial year.

A sector that was once considered one of Britain’s strongest exports is  now hemorrhaging money.

And the cause is simple.

Domestic undergraduate fees have fallen  27% in real terms between 2012 and 2025, gutted by inflation, while the headline tuition  fee stayed frozen.

International students were   the patch holding the budget together.

They were  charged premium fees.

They subsidized the entire system.

And then international enrollment fell.

For the second consecutive year in 2024 2025, the number of international students at UK  universities dropped down 6% overall.

The Conservative government’s dependence ban ruled out  in 2024 and hit the numbers first.

Then Labour’s May 2025 immigration white paper tightened them  further, cutting the poststudy graduate visa from 24 months to 18 months and threatening a new  tuition fee levy on international student income.

The UAE pulling out lands on top of all this.

It’s  another layer of pressure, another bleed, and it   comes from a partner that Britain genuinely cannot  afford to lose.

Because the soft power argument for UK education has always rested on the elite  golf families who chose Oxford and Cambridge for their kids.

Inside the UK itself, the conversation  is splintering.

The Higher Education Free Speech Act passed in 2023 and was suspended by labor and  then partially brought back into force in August 2025.

Universities are caught between a regulator  that wants vigorous open debate, an office for students reporting record prevent escalations,  and a public increasingly suspicious of campus politics.

Gulf governments looking at all of this  from the outside aren’t seeing British liberalism   in action.

They’re seeing a country that’s  lost the plot, a country that hasn’t decided what its universities are for.

A country that  will not draw the lines that it needs to draw.

So, what does it mean when the warning comes  from the Gulf? This is the part that should make every European policymaker sit up because  the UAE isn’t a secular western liberal democracy alarmed by Islam in general.

The UAE is an  Islamic state.

It runs Sharia influence courts.

Its constitution names Islam as the official  religion.

Its president graduated from Sandhurst,   but he leads a government that takes its religious  identity seriously.

When that country tells its citizens that British universities are too  dangerous to study at, that’s not Islamophobia,   that’s expertise.

The UAE has spent more than  a decade running the most aggressive counter brotherhood operation of any government on Earth.

They’ve mapped the networks.

They’ve watched the   recruitment.

They’ve seen what happens when this  ideology takes root in a state and what it takes to push it back out.

When they say Britain has a  problem, they’re not guessing.

And the political   consequences inside Britain are already starting  to show.

Nigel Farage, leader of the Reformed UK Party, the party that’s been climbing the polls  since 2024, promised that if he becomes prime   minister, he will ban the Muslim Brotherhood.

Now, that position used to be considered French, but after January 2026, and even more so in  the recent elections, it stopped being French.

Other European governments are watching the  UAE move and asking the obvious question,   “If a Gulf ally has decided that British campuses  are too compromised to send their kids to, what does that mean for ours?” France’s interior  ministry has already published its own warning.

The Hungarian government has been running its  own brotherhood skeptic line for years.

Austria designates Brotherhood linked organizations.

Belgium and the Netherlands have now launched   their own reviews.

Sweden’s intelligence service  has flagged Brotherhood activity in its annual security reports.

Even Germany, historically the  most cautious European government on the issue,   has started listing Brotherhood linked groups  in its constitutional protection reports.

The pattern across Europe is changing country by  country quietly.

The Brotherhood goes from being a community organization to now a security concern.

And the Britain that built that pattern that   helped write the rules on what Western liberalism  is supposed to look like is now somehow the country other Europeans are quietly studying as a  cautionary tale.

The country that hosts the most generous interpretations of free speech, the most  open immigration regime for political dissident, the most permissive university culture in  Western Europe.

That country is now in 2026 the one being singled out by the Gulf.

A cautionary tale endorsed by the UAE.

That’s not a position any government wants to  be in.

So, circle back to where we started.

The president of the UAE trained at Sandhurst,  Britain’s most elite military academy.

He grew up understanding British institutions from the  inside.

And now he’s the man who decided that British universities are too dangerous for Emirati  students.

That is how far the trust has fallen.

The question now isn’t whether London takes the  UAE seriously.

The foreign office has been taking   calls from Abu Dhabi for weeks.

The question is  whether anything in Britain actually will change.

Whether Whiteall finally prescribes the Muslim  Brotherhood.

Whether the Office for Students   actually has the teeth to push back on what’s  happening inside lecture halls, whether British universities choose between international fees  and ideological discipline, whether anyone in power in London is willing to admit that an  Arab Gulf monarchy just outflanked Western liberal democracies on the question of who is the  most cleareyed about radical Islam, or whether, like every previous warning, like the 2015 Jenkins  review, like the years of UAE diplomatic pressure, Like the rising prevent numbers, this one  gets quietly filed away, studied, reviewed, closely reviewed, and in the end ignored.

So the  question is yours.

Should the UK ban the Muslim   Brotherhood? Drop your answer in the comments  and subscribe to Fall of Nations for more.