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The State Department urged American citizens on Tuesday to avoid traveling to Bahrain due to "the potential for ongoing political and civil unrest," and authorized the voluntary departure of family members of U.S. Embassy staff. It advised other Americans in Bahrain to consider leaving. Later in the day, the Pentagon authorized 5th Fleet military family members and civilians with non-emergency jobs to voluntarily leave Bahrain and travel at the government's expense to designated safe havens, mostly in the United States. The 5th Fleet commander, Vice Adm. Mark Fox, told service members that naval operations will continue and military workers will keep reporting to their posts. Bahrain has been swept up in the wave of protests that have spread across the Arab world since December, and protesters are seeking an elected government and a voice for Shiites in running the nation. Shiites account for 70 percent of the population, but are widely excluded from high-level political or security posts. Some protesters want to topple the entire royal family. Obama administration officials have been worried about the country, but their response has been uneven. They originally stressed the U.S. condemnation of the monarchy's crackdown on protesters, and then offered praise for efforts to establish a national dialogue. Yet as the U.S. quietly urged longtime ally Mubarak to leave power, and then loudly demanded the same of Moammar Gadhafi after Libya's violent repression of protesters, no similar suggestion has ever been made in Bahrain despite the persistent failure to establish order.
Saudi Arabia's new involvement in the crisis after a long history of tinkering in Bahrain complicates the situation. The Saudi royal family has bristled at U.S. demands for greater democracy throughout the Arab world, opting instead to keep public order in its kingdom by pumping billions of dollars into public subsidies and threatening tough action against perceived troublemakers. It also was unpleased by the lack of U.S. support for Mubarak. Bahrain's request for Saudi and United Arab Emirates troops could imply that the government isn't serious about changing its fundamental make-up or that the Saudis are determined to maintain order in their backyard. In either of these cases, the motivation would be at odds with the U.S. goal for the region of establishing stronger ties even as countries make greater commitments toward democracy. Clinton said she told the Saudi foreign minister that "everyone needs to be promoting the dialogue between the parties." Yet, illustrating the primarily problem in Bahrain, she said the U.S. calls "on all sides to immediately begin that dialogue."
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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