Los Angeles Times

Qatar crisis tests White House

President Trump has sided with the Saudis, throwing a wrench in U.S. officials’ efforts to defuse the showdown.

- By Tracy Wilkinson and Nabih Bulos

WASHINGTON — America’s top diplomat, Rex Tillerson, spent much of last week working on a single issue: how to defuse the potentiall­y explosive crisis in the oil- and gas-rich Persian Gulf after the Trump administra­tion unexpected­ly sided with one U.S. ally, Saudi Arabia, against another, Qatar.

Tillerson did not get very far.

It didn’t help that his boss, President Trump, undermined him, seemingly at every turn.

In meetings with senior officials from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait and other nations, Tillerson urged all parties to remain “open to negotiatio­n” but failed to push them closer.

At the core of the issue is a 13-point list of demands that Saudi Arabia and its three partners have slapped on Qatar. Monday was to be the deadline for Qatar’s response. At Kuwait’s request, the deadline was moved to Wednesday, but Qatari officials issued a defiant response neverthele­ss.

Qatari Foreign Minister Sheik Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n al Thani was dispatched to deliver the letter from the emir, Sheik Tamim bin Hamad al Thani, to the Kuwaiti ruler, Sheik Sabah al Ahmed al Jabbar al Sabah, according to Qatar’s official news agency.

Mohammed said earlier that the demands were extreme and “made to be rejected.”

"Everyone is aware that these demands are meant to infringe [on] the sovereignt­y of the state of Qatar, shut the freedom of speech and impose [an] auditing and probation mechanism for Qatar,” the foreign minister said.

Even State Department officials say privately that the demands are over the top, including the closing down of the Arab world’s prime television news channel, the Qatari-based Al Jazeera, which is often critical of the region’s potentates.

It would be like Trump demanding closure of the BBC.

More broadly, however, the diplomatic showdown involves fighting terrorism and countering Shiite Muslim-led Iran. The Sunni Muslim government­s of the gulf, led by Saudi Arabia, accuse Qatar of being too cozy with Tehran and supporting militant groups.

Trump lent enthusiast­ic support to Saudi Arabia, backing its move, made along with the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt, to cut off Qatari airspace, seal its land and sea borders and suspend diplomatic ties. (Kuwait did not join the blockade and is attempting to mediate.)

Trump’s decision to turn on Qatar — just days after boasting that he had brought Arab nations together in “historic” unity to fight terrorism — has stunned diplomats here and abroad.

Qatar, like Saudi Arabia, is a long-standing ally of the United States. Unlike Saudi Arabia, Qatar is also home to the largest U.S. military base in the region, with about 11,000 troops near the capital, Doha. It has been the launch point for numerous U.S. Air Force bombing missions against Islamic State militants. The tiny emirate has an independen­t streak, tends to follow its own foreign policy line and is more liberal than its neighbors — all of which angers its much larger neighbor, powerhouse Saudi Arabia.

Unlike the more authoritar­ian gulf states, Qatar praised the so-called Arab Spring protests against entrenched rulers and has even welcomed Israelis to Doha, while most of the rest of the Arab world officially shuns Israel.

Trump took an exceedingl­y positive view toward Saudi King Salman and the newly minted crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, and U.S. diplomats suspect the father and son were able to sway Trump into believing their criticisms of Qatar. His praise, in turn, gave the Saudis a green light to act harshly, and Trump’s May visit to the Saudi capital, Riyadh, was used to announce millions of dollars in U.S. weapons sales to the desert kingdom.

The confusion within the administra­tion was no more evident than on June 9. Tillerson made conciliato­ry public comments and called on Qatar’s neighbors to ease their crackdown. Less than an hour later, Trump marched into the Rose Garden, sang the Saudis’ praise again and called Qatar a “funder of terrorism at a very high level.”

Tillerson and Defense Secretary James N. Mattis have been trying to repair the damage since.

Qatar acknowledg­es that it has given haven to groups such as the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, a pro-Islamist organizati­on banned in Egypt, and other militants. But Qatari officials say that is their democracy.

In Doha “we have an Israeli trade office, and we have a Hamas representa­tive office,” Mohammed, the foreign minister, said in Washington last week. Hamas is a militant group that rules the Gaza Strip. “We have an open-door policy.”

Another of the Saudi-led quartet’s 13 demands is that Qatar cut off or reduce diplomatic relations with Iran. The foreign minister said that was an impossible demand, in part because the two countries share a massive offshore gas field. “We have to have a relationsh­ip,” he said.

The foreign minister said his country was shocked when Trump and the Saudi group turned on it, on the heels of the Riyadh meeting.

“One day we are united to fight and defeat terrorism,” he said. “Suddenly two days after this, we see a diversion from one target to another target: Qatar.”

He said he felt Trump was listening too closely to “the blockading nations” and should consult his own nation’s intelligen­ce services to get the full picture of Qatar’s dealings with militants.

Trump on Sunday spoke to the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi and Qatar, but tweeted only about the conversati­on with the Saudi king, Salman.

A statement from the White House continued Trump’s hard line on Qatar, saying he “underscore­d that unity in the region is critical” but believes that “the overriding objective of his initiative [from the Riyadh meeting] is the cessation of funding for terrorism,” a clear swipe at Qatar.

Qatar is warning that the crisis could undermine the stability of the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council, arguably one of the most effective and important regional bodies in the Middle East.

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Jubeir said last week that the 13 demands are “not negotiable.” The Saudiled bloc will convene its foreign ministers in Cairo on Wednesday to examine Qatar’s response to the list.

The economic and political sanctions are having dire consequenc­es in Qatar, something that Tillerson pointed out in public statements.

Qatar’s neighbors have restricted its access to air and sea ports, while its only land border — with Saudi Arabia — has been shut in a de-facto land blockade of the country. As much as 40% of Qatar’s food comes from Saudi Arabia.

The economic isolation spurred fear of shortages among the country’s approximat­ely 2.6 million people, of which a scant 11% are Qataris. During the last month, Turkey and Iran have dispatched planeloads of foodstuffs to cover the shortfall.

tracy.wilkinson@latimes.com Twitter: @TracyKWilk­inson Times staff writer Wilkinson reported from Washington and special correspond­ent Bulos from Beirut.

 ?? Kuwait News Agency ?? QATARI Foreign Minister Sheik Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n al Thani, left, is met in Kuwait by counterpar­t Sheik Sabah al Khaled al Sabah. Kuwait is trying to mediate an end to Qatar’s blockade by four neighbors.
Kuwait News Agency QATARI Foreign Minister Sheik Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n al Thani, left, is met in Kuwait by counterpar­t Sheik Sabah al Khaled al Sabah. Kuwait is trying to mediate an end to Qatar’s blockade by four neighbors.
 ?? Paul J. Richards AFP/Getty Images ?? U.S. SECRETARY of State Rex Tillerson has called on Qatar’s neighbors to ease their crackdown.
Paul J. Richards AFP/Getty Images U.S. SECRETARY of State Rex Tillerson has called on Qatar’s neighbors to ease their crackdown.

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