The United Arab Emirate’s decision to abstain from a U.S.-led resolution at the U.N. Security Council condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was the result of frustrations over the U.S.’ response to a recent attack on Abu Dhabi weeks earlier, the Axios website reported citing Emirati, U.S. and Israeli sources.

The UAE, which currently holds the U.N. Security Council presidency, on Friday abstained from the U.S.-Albanian resolution condemning the Russian invasion.

U.S. forces in January helped thwart an unprecedented Houthi drone and missile attack on Abu Dhabi in January, which killed three people. However, the U.S. did not accepted the UAE’s request to redesignate the Houthis as terrorists.

President Joe Biden overturned the Trump administration’s decision to make the designation less than a month after assuming office, saying it hindered humanitarian assistance to the Yemeni people. The move emboldened the Iran-backed Houthi rebels which have since attacked Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi multiple times.

Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vasily Nebenzya appears on a television screen as Ukraine’s UN Ambassador Ukraine’s Ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya addresses the emergency session of the United Nations General Assembly, Monday, Feb. 28, 2022. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

According to the report, despite the Biden administration’s quick response to the attack — with U.S. troops firing Patriot interceptors at the misiles — its lack of wider support regarding the terrorist designation made the Emiratis feeling “abandoned.” The Emiratis also had expectations that the U.S. would allow for more intelligence sharing as well as better targeting capabilities to prevent further attacks in Yemen, the report said.

Axios reports a number of ways the UAE snubbed the U.S. in the ensuing weeks:

The sources cited by Axios also added that the U.S.’ response to Russia over its invasion of Ukraine was much stronger and faster than when they were attacked.