The Borneo Post

‘Bad for business’: Gulf states scramble to avert wider war

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DUBAI: Gulf states are grappling with the widening Middle East conflict as hostilitie­s between Iran and Israel threaten their security and ambitious plans to reshape their economies.

Leaders of the resource-rich Gulf monarchies engaged in a rapid round of diplomacy after last weekend's Iranian drone and missile strikes on Israel raised the spectre of a regional conflagrat­ion.

The desert countries lie across the Gulf from Iran, placing them on the doorstep of the latest crisis after months of tensions generated by the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.

US military facilities are scattered around the six Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) countries, and Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have both faced previous attacks on oil facilities by Yemen's Iran-backed Huthi rebels.

The Gulf countries share an "overall realisatio­n that conflict is bad for business and avoiding conflict comes now almost at any cost", said King's College London Middle East analyst Andreas Krieg.

On Monday, Qatar's emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad AlThani, spoke to the Iranian president about the "need to reduce all forms of escalation and avoid the expansion of conflict in the region", the official Qatar News Agency reported.

And on Sunday, UAE President Mohamed bin Zayed spoke to Qatar's emir and the kings of Jordan and Bahrain, state media said, while Saudi Arabia's de facto leader Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman talked with Iraq's prime minister.

Saudi Arabia's foreign minister spoke with his counterpar­t in Iran, and the Saudi defence minister held discussion­s with his US counterpar­t.

Much is at stake for the wealthy, US-friendly Gulf states, whose expensive economic diversific­ation plans, aimed at securing their futures postfossil fuels, rely on a peaceful environmen­t for business and tourism.

'Wealth of targets'

Top oil exporter Saudi Arabia has been the biggest spender, pledging hundreds of billions for new cities and leisure attraction­s as part of Prince Mohammed's flagship Vision 2030 economic transforma­tion plan.

"Saudi's top priority is that the crisis does not escalate," Ali Shihabi, a Saudi analyst who is close to the royal court in Riyadh, told AFP, stressing the Gulf's vulnerabil­ity.

If there is an attack on Iran,

Tehran might "be tempted to retaliate against the GCC given its close proximity and wealth of targets (that are) difficult to protect".

"Iran just learned how difficult it is to target Israel thousands of miles away but the GCC with its proximity and massive size compared to Israel is a different story," he added.

In Saudi Arabia's favour is its influence over the US -- which is pushing it to follow the UAE and Bahrain by recognisin­g Israel -and renewed ties with Iran, which were resumed last year after a lengthy rupture. The deadliest ever war in Gaza had already dampened US efforts to broker a Saudi-Israeli normalisat­ion.

"Saudi will be definitely pushing for the US to pressure Israel for a ceasefire in Gaza and also to not respond to Iranian attacks," said Umer Karim, researcher of Saudi foreign policy and politics at Britain's University of Birmingham.

No good choices

Meanwhile Oman, which is close to Iran, remains a vital conduit of mediation. And Qatar has leverage as the host of AlUdeid, the region's biggest US military base, said Krieg.

"When it comes to anything to do with the Strait of Hormuz or Bab al-Mandeb, (the Omanis) have deeper networks and are probably the more effective mediator," he said, referring to strategic waterways in the Gulf and the Red Sea.

He said the US had not given Gulf mediators "enough credit for how important that relationsh­ip has been... in creating a response from Iran that is, I would say, still quite measured".

"Qatar is very particular because of Al-Udeid," Krieg said, explaining that Doha would likely continue "telling the Americans, they can't use their airspace, can't use their bases to launch attacks against Iran. That will make it very, very difficult for the United States to actually assist Israel in a potential offensive strike inside Iran," he added.

Washington has reaffirmed "ironclad" support for Israel, but a US official said it would not join any potential Israeli counteratt­ack against Iran. — AFP

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 ?? Map data: OSM, NASA DJIBOUTI 500 km ??
Map data: OSM, NASA DJIBOUTI 500 km

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