Gulf News

US cannot afford to pick sides in Qatar crisis, lawyer says

‘If US wants to limit terrorism, it must focus on maintainin­g GCC unity’

- Erdogan: Saudi Arabia has a big role to play in the region BY SAMIR SALAMA

US interests are deeply rooted on both sides of the Qatar row, and the Donald Trump administra­tion has presumably avoided taking sides to protect vital US relationsh­ips, a renowned internatio­nal lawyer said on Wednesday.

Robert Amsterdam, whose blend of political advocacy and internatio­nal law has led to his retention by several world leaders, spelt out why the US administra­tion has been sending mixed messages to both sides in the Qatar rift.

“All of the Gulf nations are members of the US-led coalition against Daesh. Qatar hosts the largest US airbase in the region; more than 10,000 US troops are based at Qatar’s Al Udeid Airbase, which acts as US Central Command’s regional headquarte­rs. Outside Qatar, all Gulf countries are purchasers of US defence equipment and are tied to US foreign policy priorities in numerous ways. Between 2009 and 2015, the US concluded $58 billion in arms deals with Saudi Arabia, and their financial ties are continuing to expand,” Amsterdam told Gulf News in an exclusive interview.

Walking a tightrope

“Outside of financial and military ties with Gulf countries, the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) represents one of the most stable multilater­al bodies in the region. Both Qatar and its boycotting coalition are members of this council (except Egypt), meaning that the rift threatens the Gulf’s most stable unified internatio­nal body. In other words, the costs of alienating any of the countries involved in the Qatar crisis are high,” Amsterdam said.

Amsterdam assessed that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s involvemen­t in negotiatio­ns between the Saudi bloc and Qatar, indicated that US hopes to facilitate a resolution that maintains regional stability and US ties with both Qatar and the Saudi coalition.

On how US anti-boycott laws could come into play in the Qatar crisis, Amsterdam said these laws say that US companies can be punished if they accept a foreign country’s demand to comply with a boycott that is not supported by the United States. The laws were designed to ensure that US private firms are not used as a tool by another country to advance their own foreign policy, and were initially passed to protect Israel when the Arab League boycotted the small state in the 1970s.

So, unless the United States is participat­ing in the boycott of Qatar, US companies can stumble into legal trouble by making an individual decision to boycott the small country. Given Trump’s ambiguous position on the crisis, it is not fully clear whether companies could violate anti-boycott laws because US participat­ion in the boycott is in question.

Amsterdam argued that a US corporate boycott of Qatar as a means for stopping their alleged support for terrorist organisati­ons would be a misguided policy decision.

Amsterdam suggested if the US is interested in limiting terrorist activity in the region, it must focus primarily on facilitati­ng negotiatio­n and maintainin­g unity within the GCC.

GCC future in question

On why the US can’t afford to mismanage the Qatar crisis, Amsterdam said the GCC is arguably the most stable force in the Middle East, with Saudi Arabia and the UAE acting as de facto regional leaders and stabiliser­s. The stability of the Gulf and United States’ influence over the region’s most powerful countries are both invaluable to US strategic interests. The Qatar crisis puts all of this at risk.

“If the US hopes to contain the spread of terrorist organisati­ons through multilater­al decisions and partnershi­ps with regional leaders, they cannot afford to mismanage this crisis,” Amsterdam said.

On whether the crisis will end soon, Amsterdam said currently, there are no indication­s that either side is willing or interested in reaching a compromise soon. Recent decisions on both sides point towards further escalation, not resolution.

“Saudi Arabia’s list of demands for Qatar included unreasonab­le requests, (severing ties with Iran, defunding Qatar’s global Al Jazeera news network, and severing government ties with the Muslim Brotherhoo­d), and gave Qatar an unreasonab­le timeline of only 12 days to complete the excessive demands,” he said.

Amsterdam said Qatar has hired a Swiss law firm to investigat­e and pursue lawsuits over the Saudi coalition’s violation of human rights, and has accused its boycotting countries of violating internatio­nal law.

“On both sides, leaders have opted for escalation. Iran and Turkey have used this opportunit­y to show their support for Qatar by keeping it supplied with food and other vital goods, giving it the means to survive indefinite­ly,” Amsterdam said.

 ??  ?? Robert Amsterdam
Robert Amsterdam

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates