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After external strikes and internal crisis, Iran skips Qatari defense show Dimdex

One analyst said it's no surprise Doha may not welcome Tehran, months after the Islamic Republic targeted a US military base in Qatar.

Patriot PAC 2/ GEM T missile canisters launched during Operation Breaking the Spears on 23/06/2025 displayed at Dimdex 2026 (Agnes Helou)

DIMDEX 2026 — Walking the show floor at Dimdex in the Qatar this week, past scores of booths manned by defense company reps from dozens of counties, one past guest appears notably absent: Iran.

For at least the past two editions of the naval expo, in 2022 and 2024, officials from Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps were in attendance, showing off indigenous naval guns, drones, air defenses and radars. But this year, months after unprecedented strikes on its homeland by Israel and the US, and amid significant domestic unrest, Tehran’s representatives appear to have skipped the show.

While one analyst told Breaking Defense Tehran’s absense could signal increased isolation for the Shiite majority nation, another said it’s logical that Iranians would not attend a show in Qatar — a country Tehran bombed when it targeted a US military base there in June.

“There are two countries that have fired missiles at Qatar: Israel and Iran. They both have extensive defense industries, they both are big exporters of weapons, [but] neither of them are here,” defense and Gulf security expert David Des Roches told Breaking Defense. (Israel killed senior Hamas figures in Doha in September.)

“Given the nature of the attack, it’s when you fire missiles at a country, even if they have an advanced air defense system like Qatar does, there’s no guarantee that you’re not going to hit something you don’t want to hit. I think the Qataris needed to show the Iranians that this is not something that can just be sloughed off,” he added.

Speaking more generally, Marwa Maziad, an assistant professor of international relations at the Gildenhorn Institute for Israel Studies at University of Maryland, considered Iran’s absence a signal that it is distancing itself from the Gulf states.

“I think that Iran doesn’t want to show up in this show right now, because maybe what’s to come is more escalations, and it’s isolating itself from the Gulf,” she said. “So in a sense, there is a different coalition being built among the Arab Gulf states and Iran is out of that.”

Show organizers did not respond for a request for comment on Iran’s absence, but elsewhere on the show floor another signal may have been sent: Two Patriot launcher canisters used to intercept Iranian missiles during the attack on the US military facility were on display at the Qatar Emiri Air Defence Forces — an unusual move for defense shows that usually only show prototype or models of weapons systems rather than those used operationally.