The National - News

Doha must stop supporting extremists,

Doha has spent years giving money and support to extremists. That must end

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In every crisis, there is an opportunit­y, and the Gulf states are hoping that Qatar will realise there is an opportunit­y that emerges from this particular crisis. For far too long, Doha has operated its foreign policy without regard to how its actions will affect its neighbours and the wider Middle East. This particular moment, with the patience of its neighbours exhausted, is a chance for Doha to re-pivot its priorities, to come back into the fold of the GCC, and to recognise that playing a double game is unsustaina­ble. Indeed, that double game allows regimes such as Iran to think they can split GCC opinion, and allows groups such as the Muslim Brotherhoo­d to think they can spread their ideology without censure.

That indeed was the message coming out of Washington, as well. “We are stopping the funding of terrorism,” the US president Donald Trump told a cabinet meeting on Monday. “You have to starve the beast.”

That is right. The “beast” in Mr Trump’s analogy is extremists around the region, particular­ly the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, which thrives on money. It is only because the Brotherhoo­d has been able to get hold of vast quantities of cash over the years that it has been able to continue its activities. That is why some Gulf states are so keen to sanction Qatari individual­s, because it is from there that these extremist groups get their funding. By starving the beast, these groups will have to stop spewing their hate and radicalisi­ng communitie­s.

Once again, though, it is important to repeat, as the Gulf states have done, that these actions are not aimed at the Qatari people, but at the policies of the government. Saudi Arabia, for example, has moved to reassure Qataris that there are no restrictio­ns on them performing the Umrah pilgrimage. Saudi Arabia and the UAE also made sure to explain that Qataris married to their citizens will be exempt from the notice for Qataris to leave those countries.

On social media, too, there was an attempt to push back against the misinforma­tion that has taken hold. A hashtag – #Not_a_ siege_but_a_boycott – has been trending over the past few days, noting that the decision to cut off relations is not a “siege” of Qatar, but a boycott based on specific policies that Doha has implemente­d. If those policies were changed, relations could return to normal. Everyone in the Gulf wants that to happen, but it requires decisions to be taken in Doha.

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