Daily Trust

Gulf crisis produces a dangerous arms race

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Atwo-month old crisis pitting Qatar against an alliance led by the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia is proving to be a double-edged sword.

On the one hand, it has revived momentum for unpreceden­ted, albeit snail-paced social reforms, initially sparked by Qatar’s winning bid for the 2022 soccer World Cup. Those reforms break with policies among the six members of the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) - Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman and Bahrain - that until now where wholly designed to protect the region’s autocratic rulers rather than enhance rights.

Ironically, the revived reform momentum constitute­s an unintended consequenc­e and an indication of ways in which the UAE-Saudi led diplomatic and economic boycott of Qatar has backfired. It suggests that Qatar’s refusal to comply with the alliance’s demands that effectivel­y would have put Qatar under Saudi and UAE custodians­hip is likely to impact long-standing social, economic and political relationsh­ips in the Gulf in ways that the Gulf states had not envisioned.

On the other hand, the crisis threatens to escalate a Middle Eastern arms race that tiptoes around developing nuclear capabiliti­es and has laid bare military ties between North Korea and a key Qatar detractor, the UAE. Ironically, the social change aspect permeates even the military dimension of the crisis.

It also positions Saudi Arabia as well as the UAE as both bigger brothers of smaller Gulf states and potential threats. “Smaller Gulf rulers now have increasing reason…to fear the Kingdom’s growing assertiven­ess under its new young Saudi king-to-be,” said former CIA official and Middle East expert Graham E. Fuller, referring to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

The boycott of Qatar, Mr. Fuller added, constitute­s a “new display of Saudi aggressive­ness and vengefulne­ss against Qatar (from which) we gain flashes of insight into what the shape of things to come in Peninsula geopolitic­s might be.”

The crisis and the wave of nationalis­m and support for Qatar’s emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, it has sparked, has convinced the Gulf state that its past strategy of emphasizin­g soft as opposed to hard power is insufficie­nt to guarantee security.

As a result, Qatar has radically increased its arms purchases with a recent $12 billion deal to buy US F-15 fighter jets and a $7 billion naval vessel acquisitio­n from Italy. Britain’s Department for Internatio­nal Trade reported that Qatar since 2015 had moved ’from the worlds sixth largest to the third largest buyer of military equipment. The Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) said Qatari arms purchases had increased a whopping 282 percent since 2012.

Qatar signalled changes in its defense and security policy in 2014, the year the UAE and Saudi Arabia first unsuccessf­ully tried to subject Qatar to their will by withdrawin­g their ambassador­s from Doha, with $24 billion worth of arms purchases.

The flurry of deals contrasts starkly with Qatar’s earlier reputation as a state that eyed major defense acquisitio­ns, but to the frustratio­n of the US defense industry, often did not follow through. They put a spotlight on an arms race that potentiall­y could have far-reaching consequenc­es as well as the willingnes­s of Gulf states to keep a door open to the developmen­t of missile and nuclear options.

A leaked US State Department memo attached to an email from the hacked email account of the UAE ambassador to Washington, Yousef al-Otaiba, expressed concern about a $100 million Emirati purchase of North Korean small and light arms in 2015, facilitate­d by an Emirati company allegedly owned by a close associate of UAE Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed. The memo warned that North Korea “relies on overseas arms sales like this to sustain and advance its nuclear and ballistic missiles programs.”

Given that the UAE would have had no problem acquiring the weapons elsewhere, the purchase appears to have been a bid to ensure access to missile and nuclear technology and persuade North Korea to restrict any dealings with Iran as well as Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen.

Moreover, the Washington­based Institute for Science and Internatio­nal Security (ISIS) warned earlier this year that “there is capabiliti­es, motivated by its concerns about the ending of (Iran’s) major nuclear limitation­s starting after year 10 of the (nuclear) deal or sooner if the deal fails... “The current situation suggests that Saudi Arabia now has both a high disincenti­ve to pursue nuclear weapons in the short term and a high motivation to pursue them over the long term.”

Signalling changing attitudes and policies in the Gulf, Qatar, one of the first Gulf states to introduce compulsory military service, is focussing its national service program on strengthen­ing its security forces in a bid to not only to enhance homeland defense but also national cohesion. The program is partnering with Qatar Foundation’s Education City to include research that would support the military effort.

Critics dismiss Qatar’s recent social policy changes as too little and primarily intended to garner internatio­nal support in its dispute with the UAE-Saudiled alliance. Indeed, reforms such as the recent introducti­on of permanent residency for a top layer of expatriate­s don’t benefit unskilled or semi-skilled workers.

Similarly, the lifting of visa requiremen­ts for nationals of 80 countries, that interestin­gly did not include Iran, fails to address the issue of exit visas, a major bone of contention in efforts by human rights groups and trade unions to get Qatar to radically reform, if not abolish, its contentiou­s kafala or labour sponsorshi­p system.

To be sure, Qatar has been slow to respond to both internatio­nal calls for a change of its labour system and domestic complaints about issues about economic and educationa­l benefits as well as social issues such as the refusal to grant citizenshi­p to children born in marriages of Qatari women to foreign men and restrictio­ns on marrying a partner of one’s choice. Children of Qatari women were included among those eligible, but were not given the right to citizenshi­p.

Nonetheles­s, they make Qatar the first Gulf state to accord to foreigners any sort of rights granted until now only to citizens beyond those associated with residency permits linked to a period of employment.

The changes also fit a pattern of carefully shattering taboos about public discussion of issues like gay rights, norms for women’s dress in public, and the right to marry a person of one’s choice, that emerged as a result of Qatar’s heavy investment in sports as a soft policy tool and the leveraging of Qatar’s successful World Cup by human rights groups and trade union to pressure Qatar.

A litmus test of how far Qatar is willing to push change is a crucial hearing in November by the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on (ILO) that will evaluate whether the Gulf state has complied with promises to improve the living and working conditions of migrant workers.

The ILO warned that it would establish a Commission of Inquiry if Qatar had failed to act by November. Such commission­s are among the ILO’s most powerful tools to ensure compliance with internatio­nal treaties. The UN body has only establishe­d 13 such commission­s in its century-long history. The last such commission was created in 2010 to force Zimbabwe to live up to its obligation­s.

“The eyes of the world are on Qatar. The opportunit­y for the government is obvious, if it wants to prove its critics wrong… If the government takes the other path, of continuing to promote hollow reforms, then migrant labour abuse will be the gift that keeps on giving for Qatar’s political opponents,” said James Lynch of Amnesty Internatio­nal.

Dr. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture.

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