San Diego Union-Tribune

GULF ARAB LEADERS EASE RIFT WITH QATAR

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Representa­tives of several Gulf states signed an agreement Tuesday to ease Qatar’s isolation from its Arab neighbors, which have blockaded the country since 2017, a major step toward ending a rift that has left it excluded for years.

The agreement, signed at a regional summit meeting in Al Ula, Saudi Arabia, by representa­tives from that kingdom and the five other Gulf Cooperatio­n Council countries, was announced Tuesday afternoon, although few details were immediatel­y available.

The de facto Saudi leader, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, speaking during the meeting, said the agreement emphasized “solidarity and stability in the Gulf, Arab and Islamic countries, and the strengthen­ing of bonds of friendship and brotherhoo­d between our countries and peoples, in a way that serves their hopes and aspiration­s,” according to the Saudi news outlet Al-Arabiya.

The agreement came one day after Saudi Arabia agreed to reopen its borders and airspace to Qatar for the first time since the blockade began. Qatar has been paying an estimated $100 million annually to route planes through Iranian airspace, money that the United States was eager to see halted as it was seen as propping up Tehran’s faltering economy.

Qatar’s neighbors — including the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Egypt and Saudi Arabia — cut off the small peninsular country with an air, land and sea embargo after accusing its rulers of supporting terrorism and Islamists in the region and of drawing closer to Iran, a rival to the dominant Saudis. Qatar denied the accusation­s that it financed terrorism and maintained that it would be unreasonab­le to cut ties with Tehran, a major trading partner across the Persian Gulf, where the two countries share a critical offshore natural gas field.

The regional divisions had wider implicatio­ns, fracturing mutually dependent nations and leaving the United States caught between allies that it relies on for oil and military bases, while hindering attempts by the Trump administra­tion to further isolate Iran.

The administra­tion had been working behind the scenes for months to usher in a resolution, and President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, was part of a delegation that met with leaders in Qatar and Saudi Arabia in recent months.

 ?? AMR NABIL AP ?? Saudi journalist­s watch a screen showing Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani at the 41st Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) meeting in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday. Qatar’s emir arrived after Saudi Arabia announced it would end its yearslong embargo on the state.
AMR NABIL AP Saudi journalist­s watch a screen showing Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani at the 41st Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) meeting in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday. Qatar’s emir arrived after Saudi Arabia announced it would end its yearslong embargo on the state.

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