Los Angeles Times

Trump again lashes out at Qatar

Criticism of key ally comes even as aides call on Arab nations to ease crackdown.

- By Tracy Wilkinson tracy.wilkinson @latimes.com Times staff writers W.J. Hennigan and Michael A. Memoli in Washington contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — Even as his top advisors sought to defuse an escalating crisis in the volatile Middle East, President Trump on Friday doubled down on his criticism of Qatar, a key U.S. ally, calling it a longtime “funder of terrorism at a very high level.”

Trump again took credit for what he described as a growing movement to fight Islamist-inspired terrorism in Sunni Arab countries. He did not acknowledg­e any responsibi­lity, however, for adding to the tensions with criticisms that his aides have struggled to walk back.

To that end, just an hour before Trump’s comments at a Rose Garden news conference, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson called on Saudi Arabia and three other Arab nations to ease their recent crackdown against Qatar.

Tillerson said the decision of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt to cut diplomatic and economic ties with the emirate was having dire humanitari­an consequenc­es and harming U.S. military operations fighting Islamic State.

Qatar is the site of the largest U.S. military base in the region and the launching point of numerous U.S. Air Force bombing missions.

“Our expectatio­n is that these countries will immediatel­y take steps to de-escalate the situation and put forth a good faith effort to resolve their grievances they have with each other,” Tillerson said, reading a statement to reporters.

He called for a “calm and thoughtful dialogue” to ease the crisis, which he said was causing food shortages, separation of families and loss of business in Qatar. He took no questions.

Trump, however, did not seem to be on the same page and a short time later contradict­ed his secretary of State, again praising Saudi Arabia, “my friend King Salman” and the “truly historic summit” that the Saudi ruler hosted in Riyadh.

Trump also used the appearance to make a commitment to the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on’s core mutual defense obligation, weeks after he declined to do so at a meeting of alliance members in Brussels.

“I am committing the United States to Article 5,” Trump said in response to a question during the news conference, with the president of Romania at his side.

By siding so vociferous­ly with Saudi Arabia, the president’s latest foray into Middle East diplomacy has managed to roil allies and adversarie­s alike, and inflame already volatile tensions between the Gulf region’s two powerhouse­s, Sunni-dominated Saudi Arabia and Shiite Iran.

Veteran diplomats called Trump’s actions confused or simplistic at best — and at worst, dangerous. They warned that the contradict­ions ultimately undermined Trump’s broader desire to form a coalition of Arab states that would fight Islamic State, isolate Iran and help with peace between Israel and the Palestinia­ns.

Administra­tion officials “have been all over the map,” said Michele Dunne, a former specialist at the State Department and director of the Middle East program at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace. The Saudis “have long wanted to bring Qatar to heel … but it is not in the interests of the United States at all.”

Many experts saw the decision to turn on Qatar as a move promoted by Saudi Arabia to punish the tiny emirate for its independen­ce and efforts to punch above its weight on foreign policy matters. Unlike more authoritar­ian Gulf states, Qatar reacted positively to the so-called Arab Spring of anti-regime protest movements in Tunisia, Egypt and elsewhere, and has been more proactive in reaching out to Israel, still officially shunned by most of the Arab world. It also welcomed the establishm­ent of the Al Udeid U.S. military base.

Qatar’s capital city, Doha, is also the home base of the Al Jazeera internatio­nal news network, highly regarded in much of the Arab world and also quite critical of Riyadh and other authoritar­ian regimes. That earned it enmity in Saudi Arabia, which ordered its offices closed as part of the freeze on Qatar.

This internatio­nal activism has been a mixed bag. Qataris have supported anti-authoritar­ian groups but also pro-Islamic groups, which in some parts of the region are the same thing.

Hence Qatar’s support for the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in Egypt riles the government of President Abdel Fattah Sisi, who sees the political and social organizati­on as a terrorist front.

Tillerson and Defense Secretary James N. Mattis had been working the last few days to repair the rift and were holed up part of the time with Trump. Trump also was on the telephone to several Gulf leaders Thursday and Friday, including the emir of Qatar, all in an urgent attempt to avoid further escalation. The latest of those was Friday with Sisi, to whom Trump expressed “the importance of maintainin­g unity among Arab countries,” the White House said.

In addition to offending Qatar, Trump’s efforts to boost the Saudis and other Sunni nations against Iran — while not completely out of line with past U.S. policy — end Obama-era efforts to promote a soft rapprochem­ent with Tehran to bolster moderates, and keep Iran in check with a landmark internatio­nal accord limiting its nuclear ambitions.

“This poses serious problems for the United States and brings to the fore the battle of wills between the Saudis and Iran,” said Aaron David Miller, a former Middle East envoy for Democratic and Republican administra­tions. “And all of this is swirling about when the administra­tion is looking for coherence in policy while trying to assemble this effective [Sunni Arab] coalition.”

Referring to the mixed signals from Trump and his government, Miller, now a distinguis­hed fellow at the Wilson Center, added, “Who knows what the debates inside the administra­tion have been on this?”

Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, said “siding unconditio­nally” with the Saudis against both Qatar and Iran was “dangerous” because it could encourage Riyadh to act “recklessly.”

The Pentagon has insisted that the conflict with Qatar has not interrupte­d the daily air wars orchestrat­ed by the U.S. military out of the Al Udeid base. But on Friday, spokesman Capt. Jeff Davis said: “The evolving situation is hindering our ability to plan for longerterm military operations.”

By favoring the Saudis over Qatar, Trump is ignoring those who have been equally supportive of terrorism abroad, critics say.

Despite vital RiyadhWash­ington economic connection­s and intelligen­cesharing over the years, the U.S. has “largely ignored some of the malevolent influence that the Saudis and Saudi money plays in the region and worldwide when it comes to the spread of these very violent terrorist groups,” said Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), a leading Capitol Hill critic of the desert kingdom.

Murphy is a sponsor of a bipartisan Senate resolution that would ban part of a sale of weapons to Saudi Arabia because of the killing of civilians in Yemen, where the U.S. backs a Saudi-led coalition fighting Iran-supported Houthi rebels.

 ?? Drew Angerer Getty Images ?? SECRETARY of State Rex Tillerson said the decision of Saudi Arabia and three other nations to cut ties with Qatar has had dire humanitari­an consequenc­es.
Drew Angerer Getty Images SECRETARY of State Rex Tillerson said the decision of Saudi Arabia and three other nations to cut ties with Qatar has had dire humanitari­an consequenc­es.

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