Russia
appears reluctant to choose
sides over Qatar-GCC rift
Saudi Arabia’s Blockade On Qatar Is Backfiring As Doha Embraces Iran, Turkey
Saudi
attempt to assure Qatar falls in line with their desired policy goals
is driving Doha closer to Turkey and Iran.
By
Paul Iddon
9 June, 2017
Qatar’s
neighbors have implemented a threat they made three years ago, and
severed their ties with, and physically cut off, the small Gulf
state, prompting a diplomatic crisis in the important resource-rich
region.
Bogus
comments attributed to the Qatari emir in the state press –
which Doha says, and the FBI
has confirmed, was
a result of a hack – criticizing Arab nations’ hostility to
Iran are ostensibly what sparked this crisis.
The
Saudis and the Emiratis have long viewed the Al Jazeera network in
Qatar and Doha’s alleged support for the Muslim Brotherhood as
problematic. In early 2014 – after the Saudis welcomed the
military coup in Egypt that deposed the Muslim Brotherhood’s
President Mohammad Morsi, who Qatar supported – Riyadh and Abu
Dhabi withdrew their ambassadors in protest of Doha’s independent
foreign policy.
After
making some reforms, Doha was brought back in from the cold.
Curious Timing
The
current crisis conspicuously arrived shortly after US President
Donald Trump’s trip to Saudi Arabia, where his administration
negotiated exorbitant arms sales to Riyadh and spoke of confronting
the “Iranian threat” to the region.
Qatar
has historically had closer bilateral ties with Iran than the rest of
the region has, not least because they share the world’s largest
natural gas field. Doha recalled its ambassador from Tehran after an
Iranian mob ransacked Saudi diplomatic missions in the country
following Riyadh’s execution of a Shia cleric but did not outright
sever ties.
“The
Qataris appear committed to pursuing their traditional foreign policy
strategy of playing off both Gulf powers’ conflicting agendas to
advance the Persian Gulf emirate’s own geopolitical
interests,” noted
one analysis at the time.
Today,
Tehran is reportedly granting
Doha access to its ports to import foodstuffs and
help it endure the blockade, and is also providing Qatar use of its
airspace to allow its national airlines to circumvent the newly
forbidden airspaces of its neighbors.
Iran
is likely rejoicing at the internal squabbling within the Gulf
Cooperation Council. Some speculate Tehran may even have been behind
the original hack to sow disunity in the GCC following Trump’s
jingoistic visit. The FBI has reportedly blamed
the Russians.
Doha’s
best hope for getting the blockade lifted will likely reside in
Turkey and the United States. Ankara and
Doha’sstrategic relationship has
blossomed in recent years. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and
Qatar’s Emir Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani address each other as
“brother”, and Qatar hosts Turkish troops on its soil.
Ankara
is currently debating
sending more troops there and
has called for the blockade to be lifted and a peaceful resolution to
the dispute since it also retains friendly ties with the Saudis and
the other Gulf states.
The
Ankara-Doha relationship is forged over common interests and
politics. Erdogan is a supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood and
bitterly condemned both the July 2013 coup against Morsi and the coup
leader and later Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi – who
the Saudis strongly supported as a bulwark against the Brotherhood.
Both
Ankara and Doha have also hosted the Palestinian Hamas group’s
political leader Khaled Mashaal.
Despite
President Trump’s denunciations of Qatar as a state sponsor of
terror on
Twitter –
which, coupled with his aforementioned visit to Riyadh last month,
risked emboldening the Saudis and further inflaming the crisis –
the US partnership with Qatar is very important to the region.
Since
2003, Qatar has been home to the enormous American al-Udeid airbase,
which is currently being used as a launchpad to bomb Islamic State
group militants in Iraq and Syria. It’s the most significant
airbase used by the US in the region outside of Incirlik in southeast
Turkey.
While
Washington certainly diverges with Doha on a variety of issues,
upholding cordial ties with Qatar is a much more beneficial policy to
maintain over isolating and antagonizing it. Trump is
already reportedly
playing a mediating role between
the two sides since his administration likely recognizes Washington’s
self-interest in averting this crisis.
Now
he’s inviting representatives from both sides to the White House
which, according
to CNN,
was a gesture motivated by the Qatari military putting their forces
on high alert over fears of military attack.
US
and Turkish troops would deter Qatar’s neighbors from actually
risking a war. Were any to actually break out, both sides would find
it difficult to sustain their vast military arsenals of Western
equipment for long without close support from Washington.
The
quixotic decision to blockade Qatar could also backfire if this
policy continues since it will force Doha to rely more on Iran and
Turkey.
The
Armenian-Iranian relationship is a fitting precedent to contemplate.
Armenia, a small country with powerful neighbors, forged a close
relationship with Iran in the 1990s. Armenia was at war with
Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region and Iran feared Baku
would stir up secessionist Azeri movements in its northwest.
Armenia
is predominantly Christian, while Azerbaijan is a Shia
Muslim-majority country like Iran, yet Tehran retains much better
bilateral relations with Yerevan than Baku.
Armenia
also relies heavily on Iran for its energy and trade since 80
percent of its frontiers are
blockaded by rival neighbors, namely Turkey and Azerbaijan. Its
22-mile southern frontier with Iran has therefore been termed a
“lifeline” for the country.
A
similar relationship, borne of necessity rather than political or
ideological affinities, could eventually emerge if the Saudis and
their allies persist in their current policy of shutting Qatar off
completely from their side of the Gulf.
Paul Iddon is
a freelance journalist based in Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan, who writes
about Middle East affairs.
The
Turkish President has promised to continue supporting Qatar after
Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain and Egypt severed ties with tiny but
resource-rich emirate, accusing Doha of funding terrorist
organizations.
“Now,
there are ones who are bothered because of us being together with our
Qatari brothers or sending and exporting food supplies, drugs etc –
no matter if they are in hunger or thirst – should excuse us. We
will continue to give all our support to Qatar,” Recep Tayyip
Erdogan said at an iftar (fast-breaking meal) with members of his
Justice and Development (AK) Party in Istanbul.
The
Turkish leader has urged Saudi Arabia, as “the largest and most
powerful state in the Gulf,” to reduce tensions and lift sanctions.
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