Gulf Arab dispute rattles Trump's
anti-Iran axis
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[May 31, 2017]
By Sylvia Westall and Tom Finn
DUBAI/DOHA (Reuters) - Just 10 days after
President Donald Trump called on Muslim countries to stand united
against Iran, a public feud between Qatar and some of its Gulf Arab
neighbors is jolting his attempt to tip the regional balance of power
against Tehran.
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) are incensed by Qatar's
conciliatory line on Iran, their regional arch rival, and its support
for Islamist groups, in particular the Muslim Brotherhood, which they
regard as a dangerous political enemy.
The bickering among the Sunni states erupted after Trump attended a
summit of Muslim leaders in Saudi Arabia where he denounced Shi'ite
Iran's "destabilizing interventions" in Arab lands, where Tehran is
locked in a tussle with Riyadh for influence.
The spat shows no sign of abating, raising the prospect of a long breach
between Doha and its closest allies that could have repercussions around
the Middle East.
Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani visits Kuwait on Wednesday
for talks with his counterpart Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah that are
expected to address the rift. Kuwait, a past mediator between Gulf
states, has offered to help ease tensions.
But few expect an early end to what is not their first feud. Three years
ago Saudi Arabia and the UAE withdrew their ambassadors from Doha for
similar reasons, although they returned after less than a year.
Analysts point to the unusual willingness of Qatari state-backed media
on one side, and Saudi and Emirati media on the other, to trade
rhetorical broadsides in public.
This suggests that point-scoring is taking priority over displays of
unity among some members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), a
Saudi-dominated club of states that presents itself as an outpost of
stability in a turbulent region.
In the Gulf's tightly-controlled media scene, attacks made by news
outlets tend to be authorized by governments.
"The GCC could harm it own interests in this fight and is at risk of
becoming more vulnerable to Iranian encroachment," said a Western
diplomat based in Doha.
EMBOLDENED BY TRUMP
The spat's immediate cause was a purported Qatari state media report
that the emir had cautioned against confrontation with Iran, as well as
defending the Palestinian group Hamas and Hezbollah, a Lebanese Shi'ite
movement allied to Tehran.
Qatar denied the report, saying its news agency had been hacked, but
Saudi Arabia and the UAE allowed their state-backed media to continue
running it, angering Doha.
The squabble revives old accusations that Qatar backs the Brotherhood,
which is present across most of the Muslim world and whose political
ideology challenges the principle of dynastic rule. Riyadh and Abu Dhabi
also suspect Doha is complacent about Iranian expansionism.
Some analysts speculate Riyadh and Abu Dhabi felt confident to authorize
criticisms of Qatar by their deepening friendship with Trump, confident
that his opposition to Iran and all Islamist armed groups reflects their
views more than Qatar's.
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Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al-Thani meets with U.S.
President Donald Trump in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 21, 2017.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
"When Trump gave fulsome support in Riyadh and said, 'let's isolate
Iran' that sent a signal to the UAE and Saudi, which felt emboldened
and said: let's let loose everything we have on Qatar," said Gerd
Nonneman, professor of International Relations and Gulf Studies at
Georgetown University in Qatar.
Acknowledging the tensions, the UAE minister of state for foreign
affairs, Anwar Gargash, wrote on Twitter on Sunday that the GCC
countries "are passing through a new sharp crisis that carries
within it a great danger".
Gulf officials and commentators outside Qatar said it did not matter
whether the remarks were fake because they reflected Qatar's
sympathies anyway."Doha's insistence in denying the issue is
marginal because in reality, on the ground, Qatar confirms it adopts
the policies that it is now trying to deny," an editorial in
Saudi-owned newspaper Al-Hayat on Monday said.
RIFTS HAVE RAMIFICATIONS
A Gulf Arab official said patience had run out. "What is certain is
the Gulf states led by Riyadh are not likely to tolerate such a
deviation, if intentional, especially at this junction in our
relationship with our hostile neighbor Iran."
Al Raya, a government-owned Qatari daily, hit back at Emirati
reports on Friday by publishing pictures on its front page of UAE
journalists it called "mercenaries".
Such animosities can have ramifications across the Middle East,
where Gulf states have used their financial and political clout to
influence events in Libya, Egypt, Syria, Iraq and Yemen amid
upheaval caused by the Arab Spring.
Nonneman said Kuwait and Oman clearly did not want a major rift.
"It's not in the interests of anyone for this to grow into a clash
beyond a media campaign - but sometimes these things take on a life
of their own," he said.
Iran, which denies Arab accusations that it is engaged in subversion
of Arab countries, appears to be gloating. Kayhan, a newspaper
closely associated with Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said
on Tuesday the rift reflected Saudi Arabia's inability to "form an
alliance against Tehran".
(Additional reporting by Katie Paul in Riyadh, Sami Aboudi and Noah
Browning in Dubai, Borzorgmehr Sharafedin in London, Editing by
William Maclean and David Stamp)
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