Kuwait Times

Taleban deal puts Qatar on stronger footing with US

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DOHA: Qatar’s role in clinching a historic US-Taleban accord over the weekend could further strengthen its relationsh­ip with key ally Washington despite efforts by fellow Gulf Arab states locked in a dispute with Doha to sideline it on the world stage. The deal, which creates a path for the United States to gradually pull out of Afghanista­n and opens the way for a potential end to the 18-year conflict, was signed after more than 1-1/2 years of talks that were held mostly in Doha, which hosts the Taleban’s political headquarte­rs.

“Qatar has been an enormously important partner to get us to this very moment. When we’ve had hiccups in the road they have helped us smooth them out,” US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told reporters after the signing ceremony in Doha on Saturday. Although peace negotiatio­ns between the sides within Afghanista­n could now drag on for years, the Doha accord allows Trump to claim a major foreign policy success.

“The Qataris have essentiall­y tried to make themselves crucial to the United States in being mediators where the Americans need mediators and of course post-2017... positionin­g Qatar that way was very important,” said James Dorsey of S Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies and Middle East Institute in Singapore. In 2017, Trump initially appeared to side with Saudi Arabia and its allies when they severed ties with Qatar over allegation­s it supports terrorism and is cosying up to regional foe Iran.

Doha denies the charges and says the political, trade and travel embargo imposed by Saudi Arabia, the

United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt since mid2017 aims to curtail its sovereignt­y. Washington, which wants a united Gulf front against Iran, has tried to mediate an end to the dispute which erupted from long simmering tensions over tiny but wealthy Qatar’s outsized role in the Middle East and its sponsorshi­p of opposing factions in regional conflicts.

The Taleban deal could place Qatar in a position to help de-escalate tensions between Washington and Iran. Qatar hosts the largest US military base in the region and shares a giant gas field with Iran, which sided with Doha in the Gulf spat. “I think now global actors know where to go if they want conflicts resolved in our region,” Qatar’s assistant foreign minister Lolwah Rashid Al-Khater told reporters on Saturday.

Two Western diplomats told Reuters that Qatar played a vital role when US-Taleban negotiatio­ns broke down. A Qatari official involved in the process said Doha looked for a “face-saving” way to salvage talks when Trump cancelled a meeting in September with Taleban leaders at Camp David after the group claimed an attack in Kabul that killed a US soldier.

“We thought about two things to do. Number one a hostage release or swap and the second one to work on a reduction in violence,” said Mutlaq Al-Qahtani, Qatar’s foreign ministry envoy for counterter­rorism and mediation of conflict resolution. “We thought if we succeeded in those two points we can save the process and bring the parties to the negotiatin­g table again, and that’s what we did in November,” he told Saturday’s news briefing. — AFP

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 ??  ?? DOHA: Qatari Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n Al-Thani meets US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on the sidelines of the peace signing ceremony between the United States and the Taleban on Saturday. — AFP
DOHA: Qatari Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n Al-Thani meets US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on the sidelines of the peace signing ceremony between the United States and the Taleban on Saturday. — AFP

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