Chattanooga Times Free Press

Two-day Gulf summit ends within hours amid Qatar crisis

- BY JON GAMBRELL

KUWAIT CITY — A planned two-day summit of Gulf Arab countries fell apart within hours of starting Tuesday over the ongoing boycott of Qatar, underscori­ng the difficulty of ending the crisis and suggesting that unifying the bloc of U.S. allies is slipping further from reach.

Even before Kuwait’s 88-year-old emir began the summit of the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council, the United Arab Emirates announced it formed a new partnershi­p with Saudi Arabia to coordinate “all military, political, economic, trade and cultural fields,” the basic goal of the GCC.

Abu Dhabi and Riyadh already enjoy close ties and previously signed a similar agreement last year, suggesting the latest announceme­nt was meant to scuttle any possible reconcilia­tion in Kuwait City. It also highlighte­d the inherent weakness of the six-nation GCC already exposed by the monthslong dispute between half of its members and Qatar.

“The GCC has been successful at, in essence, boring things that do not make it to public consciousn­ess — hence successes in areas of economic harmonizat­ion,” said David B. Roberts, an assistant professor at King’s College London. “But whenever an issue is controvers­ial, political or actually important, the organizati­on typically fails.”

The GCC, composed of Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, formed in 1981, in part as a counterbal­ance to Shiite power Iran. It’s no stranger to disputes among its members, especially during the mid-1990s. In the time since, the group had grown more clubby, buoyed by rising oil and energy prices. It made visa-free travel arrangemen­ts among its members and pushed toward greater economic cooperatio­n.

But a drop in oil prices, the 2011 Arab Spring and its aftermath, and other political maneuvers led to the Qatar diplomatic crisis.

The dispute began in June, following what Qatar described as a hack of its state-run news agency and the circulatio­n of incendiary comments attributed to its ruler, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani. Soon after, GCC members Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and the UAE closed off their airspace and seaports to Qatar, as well as the small peninsular nation’s sole land border with Saudi Arabia. The boycott initially riled Doha, but Qatar soon replaced food products with those flown in from Turkey and Iran.

However, Qatar’s foreign reserves have dropped by some $10 billion — a fifth of their value — since the dispute began. Those reserves are crucial in supporting the nation’s riyal, which is pegged to the U.S. dollar, as well as funding the upcoming 2022 FIFA World Cup that Doha will host.

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