The New Zealand Herald

Qatar at centre of complicate­d crisis

The tiny Gulf nation has been cut off by its neighbours in a move that may have far-reaching repercussi­ons

- Ishaan Tharoor — Washington Post

The Arab states of the Persian Gulf are in the grips of an unpreceden­ted regional crisis. On Monday, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt released co-ordinated statements, announcing a diplomatic break with the tiny-yetwealthy nation of Qatar. They cut air, sea and land links and ordered Qatari officials and nationals stationed in their countries to return home.

Qatar, with just over 300,000 citizens, has played an outsize role on the world stage because of its great wealth of oil and natural gas. Global oil prices wobbled as both sides dug in their heels. Already, panic over a Saudi blockade of Qatar’s only land border has led to supermarke­t shelves in Doha being cleaned out by spooked residents.

The move is a reflection of longrunnin­g frustratio­ns with the Qataris, who the Saudis and Emiratis claim are supporting terrorist groups as well as being far too cordial with Iran, their regional archrival. A complicate­d and uncertain state of affairs is playing out, with far-reaching stakes — Qatar, after all, is home to a crucial forward base for US Central Command. Here’s our attempt at a quick primer on what you need to know.

What’s behind the dispute?

For years now, officials in Riyadh and Abu Dhabi have been angry over what they perceive to be Qatar’s rogue, activist foreign policy. Unlike neighbouri­ng Bahrain, for example, which largely toes the Saudi line, Qatar has diverged from other members in the Gulf Co-operation Council, a bloc of six Arab monarchies, and used its vast coffers to project its own influence far and wide. After the political upheavals of the Arab Spring, for instance, Qatar aligned itself with Islamist political parties such as Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhoo­d, believing it right to back movements with genuine popular support. Much to the ire of its neighbours, Qatar’s state-funded news network Al Jazeera also seemed to take up the cause of these groups, often championin­g democracy and dissent in a region ruled by secular autocrats or unaccounta­ble royals. And Qatar was among the most active backers of Islamist fighters in rebellions in Syria and Libya.

Now, Qatar’s critics say it has failed to rein in its support for certain Islamist militant groups — including Hamas and the main al-Qaeda-linked organisati­on in Syria. The Qataris were also accused of backing Yemen’s Houthi rebels, a startling claim given that Qatar, until the day before, was part of the Saudi-led coalition fighting the Houthis, who are loosely backed by Iran.

“The countries of the region can be divided into two camps: one that seeks to advance its foreign interests through support of Islamists, and one whose foreign policy is guided by opposition to the rise of Islamists,” wrote Middle East expert Hassan Hassan. Qatar, in Hassan’s scheme, falls into the former camp, while the Saudis and Emiratis are in the latter.

Qatar’s Foreign Ministry called the measures “unjustifie­d” in a statement and said the decision to sever ties was a violation of the country’s sovereignt­y, and “based on claims and allegation­s that have no basis in fact”. Saudi Arabia and, to a lesser extent, the UAE also support various rebel groups and Islamist factions in Middle East conflicts. But the two countries have stood against political Islam in places like Egypt, championin­g current President Abdel-fattah al-Sisi, who came to power in a 2014 coup that ousted the ruling Muslim Brotherhoo­d and was followed up by a vicious, bloody crackdown on Islamists. The embattled Yemeni Government, which is almost wholly propped up by Riyadh, the Emirati-backed leadership in eastern Libya and the Indian Ocean archipelag­o of the Maldives — whose President increasing­ly seems a Saudi client — all joined the break in relations with Qatar.

The UAE, in particular, has bridled at Qatar’s continued role in backing Islamists in Libya and elsewhere and appears to have led the charge in pushing for Qatari isolation.

But that doesn’t explain why this is happening now.

There are a number of theories for why things have drifted toward such an extreme. Two separate possible hacking incidents have framed the escalating feud. First, a statement was posted on an official Qatari site that attributed comments to the emir that were sympatheti­c to Iran and Shia militant group Hizbollah. Even after the Qataris rejected the report and said it was the creation of hackers, Saudi and Emirati outlets continued to spread it as fact. Meanwhile, the leaked emails of the Emirati envoy in Washington seem to show his country’s long-running desire to counter Qatari influence.

Some experts believe Mohammed bin Zayed, the influentia­l crown prince of the emirate of Abu Dhabi, has found a willing and eager partner in the youthful Saudi deputy crown prince, Mohammad bin Salman, who has presided over Saudi Arabia’s marked foreign policy assertiven­ess in recent years and pushed for a regional anti-Iran alliance.

In a fascinatin­g tidbit reported by the Financial Times, Qatari officials apparently paid close to US$1 billion ($1.4b) in ransom for the release of a Qatari falconry party abducted while hunting in southern Iraq. The bulk of the funds allegedly made their way to Iranian officials and affiliated Shia militias — payments that were “the straw that broke the camel’s back” for Qatar’s critics in the Gulf, according to a source quoted by the newspaper.

But a leading driver also has to be President Donald Trump, whose friendly visit to Riyadh last month and embrace of the Saudi agenda in the Middle East seems to have emboldened officials there.

The Saudis and Emiratis, said Andrew Bowen, a visiting fellow at the conservati­ve American Enterprise Institute, “saw this as a key moment after Trump’s visit to bring Qatar to heel”. According to a leading Emirati journalist, officials in Abu Dhabi want to extract huge concession­s from Doha, including the shuttering of Qatari media outlets abroad and the abandoning of Qatar’s independen­t foreign policy.

What’s at stake?

It’s hard to gauge what happens next. Two GCC countries caught in the middle of the spat — Oman and Kuwait — may try to exert what limited clout they have to push for a compromise. The US could do so as well, given that the sprawling alUdeid air base on Qatari soil is a pivotal staging ground for US counterter­ror operations. Beyond US support, Qatar has significan­t fiscal reserves, retains the political support of the Turkish Government and is a key energy partner for countries like Russia and China. The Saudis and Emiratis may realise that isolating Qatar is no easy feat.

“They think they can strangle Qatar and get it to capitulate,” said Theodore Karasik, a senior analyst at Gulf State Analytics, to BuzzFeed News. “This could backfire on them completely. The number one problem is that it will force Qatar to seek new security partnershi­ps with Turkey. Doha can also turn to Iran.”

“I do worry that they’re going to misjudge each other’s positions, which could lead to this conflict taking a little bit longer to play out,” Bowen told the Washington Post.

The spat also dramatises the complexity of the divisions in the Middle East, which commentato­rs in the US often try to reduce to a simple binary between a Sunni Arab-bloc led by Saudi Arabia and Shia Iran.

“The tension between Qatar and its neighbours shows that the old geopolitic­al lines can no longer explain the Middle East,” wrote Hassan.

It remains to be seen how Trump, who exulted in his grand, lavish reception in Riyadh, will reckon with this challenge. After all, the White House insisted the President had “united the entire Muslim world in a way that it really hasn’t been in many years”, as one Trump aide put it last month. This week’s events show how laughably false that assertion was.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand