I don't believe they have much in common at all. The only two similarities that I can think of is that they are both predominantly Arab Muslim states and that they have large numbers of Lebanese who live there. (There are a lot of Lebanese guests workers in the Gulf.)
it covered an area from the Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf
Persian Gulf is the more common name. Arabian Gulf is used exclusively by Arabs.
it covered an area from the Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf
it covered an area from the Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf
NoThe "Gulf" is the Persian Gulf.The "Arab States of the Persian Gulf" are:Saudi ArabiaKuwaitBahrainQatarUnited Arab EmiratesOmanAlthough Iran and Iraq have coast on the Persian gulf, they are not considered Gulf Countries.
it covered an area from the Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf
Oman and the United Arab Emirates touch both the Gulf of Oman and the Persian Gulf.
Countries with a coastline on the Persian Gulf, called the Persian Gulf States or the Gulf States, are (clockwise, from the north): Iran (Persia), United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Qatar on a peninsula off the Saudi coast, Bahrain on an island, and Kuwait and Iraq in the northwest.
The Persian Gulf has no "south eastern border" -the south western border is Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states and Iran is the north eastern border.
jaylan jones state..
Yes. The United States achieved its major objective in the Persian Gulf War of 1990-1991: Ending the Iraqi Occupation of Kuwait.
They all have oil resources