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May 2026 editorial profile for Al Arabiya. Below: how this outlet framed the actors and regions it covered most in May 2026. Tap any tile to jump to the detailed card.
Headlines are predominantly factual and neutral, but some (e.g., #1, #4, #20) implicitly present Trump as a source of tension or confrontation, which slightly tilts toward skeptical framing. However, the outlet does not use overtly hostile language or delegitimizing terms, and many headlines simply report his statements and actions without editorializing. The mix of Arabic and English headlines shows consistent neutral tone.
Headlines 13 and 18 include critical framing of US policy (China buildup, geopolitical tensions), but overall the outlet amplifies US official statements as credible and central, indicating a generally favourable stance toward the US as an actor.
The outlet largely reports Netanyahu's actions and statements without overt hostility or celebration. However, some headlines (e.g., #13 on pardon negotiations, #20 on tense call with Trump, #24 on difficulty influencing Trump) subtly imply vulnerability or weakness, which leans slightly skeptical. Overall, the stance is neutral because the coverage is predominantly factual and does not consistently delegitimize or lionize Netanyahu.
The outlet treats CN as a normal diplomatic actor; coverage is largely factual or event-driven. Headline 9 ('Xi opens doors') is mildly positive, but headline 22 and 24 include critical third-party assessments of summit outcomes. No systematic hostility or celebration toward CN itself.
The outlet reports both Israeli actions and criticisms (e.g., headline 23 suggests negative framing of Israel), but overall the coverage is factual and balanced, with no consistent positive or negative stance toward the entity (IL). The entity is often quoted directly, but the outlet does not amplify or delegitimize it systematically.
The outlet's stance toward Lebanon as a country is neutral; most negative framing targets Hezbollah, not the state. Headlines about Lebanon's government (e.g., PM Nawaf Salam) are factual or neutral. The entity is LB (country), not Hezbollah, so the anti-Hezbollah tone does not reflect a negative stance toward Lebanon itself.
Some headlines neutrally report Iranian statements or actions, but the overall selection emphasizes threats, internal conflict, and external condemnation, indicating a skeptical stance toward Iran.
Headlines are predominantly factual or quote Putin without distancing language, but a few (e.g., 18) include external criticism of Russia. Overall, the outlet treats Putin as a legitimate global leader.
Headlines 1 and 18 include trivial/personal coverage (denial of mimicking Maduro, clothing controversy) which slightly complicates the otherwise positive framing. However, these are not hostile; they treat Rubio as a figure of interest. The entity's quoted content is often about Iran negotiations, but the outlet itself treats Rubio as a credible, authoritative source.
Headline 16 quotes a Gulf official criticizing Iran, not SA directly; headline 18 is Al Arabiya defending itself against Iranian media, not about SA. Overall, the outlet treats SA as a normal, successful economic actor with no critical framing.
The outlet reports Hamas statements and reactions neutrally (e.g., headlines 13, 19), but the overall selection emphasizes Israeli strikes and frames Hamas as a security threat or political obstacle, suggesting a skeptical stance. No celebratory or sympathetic language toward Hamas is present.
The outlet's stance is toward the UK government under Starmer, not the country GB broadly. Business and trade headlines (e.g., 5, 15, 17) are neutral or factual, but the political coverage consistently frames the government as embattled and failing, yielding a skeptical/critical stance overall.
Headline 11 is a third-party report (FT) that could imply criticism, but it is attributed and not the outlet's own voice; overall the outlet treats Putin as a major authoritative figure whose actions and statements are reported without skepticism.
Headlines are largely factual or quote third-party analysts; no overt celebration or hostility. Xi is treated as a legitimate leader in diplomatic reporting, but the outlet does not adopt a promotional tone. The entity's quoted content (e.g., warning Putin) is critical of others, but the outlet itself is neutral-to-favourable toward Xi.
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One tile per entity (country or public figure) covered enough times this month to draw a confident editorial-stance read. Colour from red (hostile) to green (supportive); intensity scales with headline volume. Tap to jump to the detailed card.