June 1, 2017 at 5:00 AM
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Tensions have resurfaced in a sustained media onslaught
that has again cast Qatar as a threat to stability and security in the
Persian Gulf. At the heart of the latest argument among members of the
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) are incendiary comments attributed to
Qatar’s Emir Tamim at a military graduation ceremony May 23.
A report published
on the Qatar News Agency (QNA) website later that day alleged that the
emir stated that Qatar had a tense relationship with President Trump’s
administration, described Hamas as “the legitimate representative of the
Palestinian people,” and called Iran “a big power in the stabilization
of the region.” Qatar TV later reported
the emir’s alleged speech on its evening news program before the
government communications office claimed — belatedly, on May 24 — that
the QNA website had been hacked and false statements posted on it.
Campaign to discredit Doha
Regardless
of whether they were made or fabricated — and people present at the
military graduation insist that the emir made no speech whatsoever —
Tamim’s remarks caused immediate uproar in regional media, much of it based in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Both countries blocked
Al Jazeera and other Qatar-based media outlets in the aftermath of the
allegations, and new articles have been published daily in the week
since. Almost without exception, each article has taken the emir’s
speech as fact and proceeded, on that basis, to accuse Qatar of being
the weak link in the threat to regional stability from Iran and
terrorism — and to demand that Qatar choose sides between the GCC and
Iran.
The ferocity and the sheer scale of the
“Qatar-bashing” articles suggest that an orchestrated campaign is
underway to discredit Doha regionally but also — crucially — in the eyes
of the Trump administration.
This comes three
years after a nine-month standoff between Qatar and three of its
neighbors — Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain — rocked the six-member
GCC. In the time since, Tamim and Abu Dhabi’s influential crown prince,
Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, exchanged frequent visits, and Qatar’s decision
to deploy 1,000 soldiers to Yemen in September 2015 seemed to indicate
that the 2014 upheaval was a thing of the past. What, then, has changed,
and why has a seemingly dormant dispute suddenly flared up again and in
such a visceral manner?
The Trump factor
A convergence of factors appears to have shifted the geopolitical landscape in the Persian Gulf. The Trump administration signaled
that it intends to follow a set of regional policies that are aligned
far closer to those of Abu Dhabi and Riyadh than Doha. Both Mohammed bin
Zayed and Saudi Arabia’s Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman were
high-profile visitors to Washington in the run-up to the Riyadh summit with Arab and Islamic leaders.
Further,
the policy inexperience of many within Trump’s inner circle has
presented an opportunity for both the Saudis and the Emiratis to shape
the administration’s thinking on critical regional issues such as Iran
and Islamism, both of which were evident during the Riyadh visit.
Whereas
the Obama administration sought to enhance U.S. engagement with the GCC
as a bloc, Trump focused instead on Saudi Arabia and the UAE as the
twin pillars of its regional approach. Strong bonds reportedly
have formed between Trump’s adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner and
Mohammed bin Salman in Saudi Arabia as well as Yusuf al-Otaiba, the
influential UAE ambassador in Washington.
Key principals within the Trump administration, such as Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and CIA Director Mike Pompeo, hold views
on Iran and the Muslim Brotherhood that are virtually indistinguishable
from those in Riyadh and Abu Dhabi. Saudi Arabia and the UAE are
emerging as the two spearheads around which U.S. regional policies are
realigning, including a set of hawkish defense and security interests;
the joint raid conducted by U.S. and UAE Special Forces in Yemen in
January may well be only the first of numerous joint initiatives across
regional conflict zones in the months and years ahead. READMOREREADMORE