Saudi Arabia successfully hosts GCC summit on Qatar - DR. ABDUL RUFF COLACHAL ___________________________ Leaders of Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)
members gathered in Riyadh on Nov 16 for a summit to discuss issues of common
interests, mainly Qatar's policy towards other member countries. The summit was
chaired by Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdulaiz Al Saud and attended by UAE Vice
President Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktum, Bahraini King Hamad bin Isa Al
Khalifa, Amir of Kuwait Shaikh Subah Al Ahmed Al Jaber Al Subah, Amir of Qatar
and Shaikh Tamin bin Hamad Al Thani. They discussed disputes between Qatar and
a group of three countries, including Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain. Amid unprecedented acrimony between Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC) states over Qatar’s controversial support for the Muslim Brotherhood, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and
Bahrain all withdrew their ambassadors to Doha in March, while attributing the
reason to Qatar's direct and indirect interference in internal issues of GCC
countries, and to its supports for individuals and organisations that endanger
the stability and security of Gulf countries. This sparked one of the GCC’s
worst diplomatic rows since its creation in 1981. Among a
variety of modern-day issues, the central concern animating this round of
difficulties is Qatar's support for various groups associated with the Muslim
Brotherhood -- the long-suppressed pan-regional Islamist movement that swept to
power in the Egyptian elections of 2012 before being deposed by the military a
year later. The spout was instigated by Qatar’s support of certain movements
and groups that stirred unrest in some states, said Khaled al-Matrafi, regional
manager of Al Arabiya News Channel in Riyadh. These groups, which adopted
“orientations and policies that opposed those of the GCC, posed the most major
points of conflict and led to the withdrawal of the ambassadors,” he said.
Qatar simply will not do as it's told by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates, who have spent months trying to force the energy-rich nation to
fundamentally alter its foreign policy. After withdrawing their ambassadors
from Qatar in March, and Bahrain, the UAE and the Saudis have kept up the
pressure ever since.
Fortunately,
the meeting between Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) leaders ended after
resolving a long-standing schism with fellow member-state Qatar meeting between
GCC leaders. A result of the meeting, the Saudi, Emirati and Bahraini
ambassadors to Qatar will return to their posts in Doha following eight months
of tense relations. The assembly reached an agreement that “promises the
opening of a new page that will present a strong base, especially in light of
the sensitive circumstances the region is undergoing,” the GCC said in a joint
statement. “Based on this, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain have decided to
return their ambassadors to Doha,” it said. Additionally, the annual GCC summit
was also confirmed to take place on Dec. 9 to Dec. 10 in Doha, the
correspondent reported. Kuwait’s
Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmed al-Sabah has been leading efforts to bridge the gap
between Qatar and Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. The
leaders, who travelled with their foreign ministers and other cabinet members
or senior officials, were greeted by Crown Prince Mugran bin Abdulaziz al-Saud
and GCC Secretary-General Abdullatif al-Zayani. The summit was crucial because the annual
GCC summit expected to be held next months in Qatar depended on the success of
the summit. The GCC summit might be cancelled or postponed to give Qatar a
period of six to one year to correct its stances and implement Riyadh agreement
that was drafted early summit in Riyadh. If the summit failed then there will
be no summit in Qatar and it will be held next year in Kuwait. Qatar is fast emerging an important Arab
nation leading the Islamic movement in the region and elsewhere, the strongest
supporters of the Palestinians. Naturally, Saudi Kingdom does
not appreciate Qatar trying to overtake Saudi leadership. Already Saudi
leadership is facing a strong Islamist movement in Turkey and elsewhere, ignoring
the kingdom in importance. Of course, tensions between Saudi Arabia
and Qatar are nothing new. Qatar has striven since the late 1980s to escape the
Saudi political orbit by vigorously pursuing its own independent foreign policy
-- regardless of the displeasure it caused in Riyadh. The Saudis, for their
part, have never liked the rejection of its leadership from an uppity small
country like Qatar that it sees as barely more than an appendage of its own
state. But for all the pressure Saudi Arabia exerted on Qatar -- including
withdrawing its ambassador from Doha from 2002-2008 -- it could not put the
Qatari genie back in the bottle. A modus vivendi was reached in 2008, but the
current crisis seems to mark another attempt to put Qatar in its place. Saudi
Arabia, Bahrain and the UAE accused Qatar of meddling in their internal affairs
by supporting the Muslim Brotherhood, which has been designated a “terrorist”
group by Riyadh and Abu Dhabi. Doha asked Brotherhood leaders to leave Qatar
earlier this year following diplomatic pressure from Saudi Arabia. The
contents of the summit reveal a renewed cooperation among the GCC members who
consider unity is more important than our differences. The agreement marks an
end to the crisis between Qatar and the other GCC members, Jamal Kashoggi,
according to the Al Arabiya News. “ Kashoggi also noted that the meeting
signaled the beginning of a new approach adopted by GCC members when working
together, which is “based on respecting the independence of each country, as
long as no other country could hurt the security of the other.” “What happened
last night with the agreement is that GCC unity is way more important than any
difference between GCC countries,” he said. In a
statement on the official Kuwait news agency, Kuwait Parliament Speaker Marzouk
al-Ghanem voiced “optimism” on the “efforts” by Sheikh Sabah to end the
differences. “We hope the Riyadh meeting today comes to a happy ending that
strengthens the GCC,” he said. As to the change in policy to abide by the
agreement, he predicted that the media wars between the UAE and Qatar would
come to an end. Each side began to cool it and calm down with the inflammatory
rhetoric and that is good that is very positive because it was very much wrong
for the countries to do this exchange,” he said, adding that how Qatar would
continue its policy with Egypt is another thing to monitor. The
surprise meeting in July between Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad bin
Khalifa Al Thani and King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia was prompted by the conflict
in Gaza, yet it could also be a step towards resolving tensions within the GCC.
That Emir Tamim personally travelled to meet King Abdullah at his Jeddah palace
was a sign that the two monarchs want to move towards normalising ties, while
also trying to snuff out another regional fire before it becomes more of a
danger. The
meeting was to try to bridge the gaps between Arab states and come to a type of
unity approach to have Gaza ceasefire that lasts, said sources from
research and consultancy at the Dubai-based Institute for Near East and Gulf
Military Analysis. Over 1200 Palestinians, including children, have been killed
during the latest fighting between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip, which
began on July 8. Thirty-four Israelis have been killed. Achieving
that unified approach would mean lessening the regional rivalry that the
conflict has brought into stark focus. An early Egyptian proposal for a
ceasefire agreement was accepted by Israel, but rejected by Hamas, which
said it was not contacted about it. Afterwards, Qatar, one of Hamas’ main
backers, which was reportedly also working on a ceasefire initiative, stepped
in to offer itself as a conduit to communicate with the group, which many among
the international community consider a terrorist organisation. While the United States
and United Nations encouraged a role for Qatar, its policy of supporting
Islamist groups such as Hamas, an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood, was what
caused tensions with other GCC states to boil over in the first place. Saudi is eager to see
Qatar has a much reduced influence in Islamic world. Amid the regional
politicking, Egypt, which is ruled by military bosses, got elected by boosted
polls, borders the Gaza Strip with terror blockades to support Israeli plan,
and is the “traditional mediator” of conflicts between Israel and Hamas, is
where the international community appears to be looking to for the next
ceasefire proposal. While Saudi Arabia, one
of Egypt’s main backers, does not want Qatar to play a prominent role in
mediating the Gaza conflict, it recognises that the growing number of regional
crises must be addressed and Doha is part of that equation. Saudi expects Cairo
to mediate, and not Qatar, and wants to shift initiatives from Qatar to Egypt
so that is and USA can manipulate. The dynamics of the region have stayed with
Qatar. Already facing ongoing
conflicts in Syria and Iraq, Saudi Arabia does not want the Gaza war to become
another opportunity for its regional rivals. Although their relationship was
strained by the war in Syria, Hamas and Iran have recently moved to repair
ties. For Riyadh, ending the conflict before Hamas begins searching for
additional supporters means talking to Qatar. What Saudi Arabia really
doesn’t want is to have Iran get involved in this issue but it does not
actively defend the Palestinians and leave them to their own crude fate when
Israeli military attacks them. Riyadh says this is not in anybody’s
interest given the nature of this conflict. They also don’t want to see Iran’s
fingerprints in this. GCC feels peace in Mideast should not depend on Iran.
A Doha-based researcher
said that while Emir Tamim’s trip came as a surprise, it might be part of
efforts made in the last few months “to restore normal ties between Qatar and
Saudi Arabia”. He added that the visit was “a good move” and that Saudi Arabia
was the right place for Qatar to start to try to end its regional isolation. Doha is scheduled to
host the 35th annual GCC summit later this year and it is likely that
diplomatic momentum is building for tensions to be eased ahead of that meeting. Indeed, GCC summit saved
the nations go from bad to worse. Officially, Qatar is back to GCC fold.
By using its influence in Washington and other western capitals, Saudi
Arabia can play more constructive role on Palestine
as well .
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