The United Arab Emirates has successfully brokered its 24th prisoner of war exchange between Russia and Ukraine, securing the release of 370 captives from each side. The latest exchange brings the total number of prisoners freed through UAE mediation since 2022 to 7,471 — making the UAE the single most active neutral mediator in the Russia-Ukraine conflict outside of the United Nations.
The UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed the exchange, reaffirming the country’s commitment to supporting all initiatives aimed at achieving a peaceful resolution to the conflict and easing its humanitarian impact. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy acknowledged the mediation on social media, noting that the freed prisoners included some held in Russian captivity since 2022.
UAE’s Unique Diplomatic Position
The UAE’s ability to act as a trusted intermediary between Moscow and Kyiv reflects the distinctive foreign policy architecture the country has built over the past decade — one that prioritises broad diplomatic engagement over bloc alignment. Abu Dhabi has maintained working relations with both Russia and Ukraine throughout the war, navigating complex international pressures from Western allies while preserving channels of communication with Moscow that most Western governments cannot access.
This model has proved uniquely effective for humanitarian missions. While ceasefire negotiations remain the domain of larger powers, the UAE has carved out a specific and recognised role in the war’s humanitarian dimension — one that has freed more than 7,400 people who would otherwise remain in captivity. The 24 exchanges it has brokered significantly outpace the total number facilitated by all other third-party mediators combined.
The Broader Context: UAE Diplomacy in 2026
The Russia-Ukraine mediation comes during a period of extraordinary diplomatic activity for the UAE. In 2026 alone, Abu Dhabi has been involved in facilitating the GCC’s unified response to the US-Iran conflict, hosting post-ceasefire reconstruction discussions for the wider Gulf region, and advancing its Belt and Road alternative connectivity agenda through CEPA trade agreements. The prisoner exchange demonstrates that the UAE’s diplomacy extends well beyond its own region and has genuine global humanitarian reach.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated that the exchange was facilitated through direct coordination with the governments of both Russia and Ukraine, with UAE diplomatic teams working on the logistical arrangements for the transfer of prisoners across multiple locations.
What This Means for UAE’s Global Standing
For the UAE’s international reputation — and for Dubai specifically as a global business and investment hub — active diplomatic engagement of this nature carries significant soft-power value. Governments and multinationals that operate in conflict-adjacent environments increasingly value the UAE not just as a financial and logistics hub, but as a state with genuine diplomatic influence that can open doors and create stability in complex situations.
The 24th successful exchange also reinforces the UAE’s track record of delivery — not just aspirational diplomacy but operational results. When businesses and investors evaluate the UAE as a base, this kind of consistent, results-oriented global engagement is part of the country’s proposition as a place where the government is competent, active and trusted internationally.
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