By Asad Ismi
A blockade imposed on Qatar by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE),
Bahrain and Egypt entered its third month in August as negotiations to end it
remained deadlocked. The comprehensive blockade cuts diplomatic relations
between the countries, closes borders and land, air and sea routes, and even
prohibits citizens of the boycotting nations from working in Qatar. Iran has
rushed to Qatar’s aid and is flying large food shipments into the country.
The main reasons given for the blockade by Saudi Arabia and the other three
countries are Qatar’s alleged support for terrorism (especially its close links
to the Muslim Brotherhood party in Egypt), its interference in their internal
affairs, the news channel Al Jazeera and Qatar’s good relations with Iran. The
four blockading countries have issued thirteen demands to Qatar that include
closing Al Jazeera, downgrading trade relations with Iran, expelling the
“terrorists” it is harbouring, ceasing other support for terrorism, closing a
Turkish military base and bringing its foreign policy in line with that of the
Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC), a regional political organization to which
Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the UAE, Oman, Kuwait and Qatar all belong.
Qatar has rejected these demands as an attack on its sovereignty. All the
countries in the dispute are U.S. client states, competing for Washington’s
approval, but the White House itself is divided on the issue, with U.S. diplo-
macy now hobbled by a contradictory foreign policy. The blockade is opposed
by Rex Tillerson, the U.S. secretary of state, but was encouraged by President
Donald Trump during his visit in May to Saudi Arabia. Tillerson’s shuttle
diplomacy amongst the conflicted countries in July failed to break the deadlock.
Qatar hosts the biggest U.S. military base in the Middle East, which houses an
estimated 10,000 troops.
Conn Hallinan, an analyst with Foreign Policy in Focus, a project of the
Washington, D.C.–based Institute for Policy Studies, explains that Trump’s
trip to Saudi Arabia was a major reason for his supporting the Qatar
blockade. “Trump is deeply ignorant on foreign policy and particularly so in
the Middle East,” he says. “The Saudis threw him a dog and pony show and
he took the bait.
“Trump has since backed away — a little — from his blanket support for
the blockade. A major reason is that Qatar is strategically important for
the U.S.”
Hallinan cautions that Tillerson “may not support the blockade against Qatar but
he still holds to the 1979 Carter Doctrine that gives the U.S. the unilateral
right to intervene in the Middle East to preserve the control of energy resources
for Washington and its allies.”
Sabah Al-Mukhtar, president of the Arab Lawyers Association based in
London, U.K., tells me the dispute “has nothing to do with terrorism, which
is supported by Saudi Arabia and the UAE as well.” These countries, as well
as Qatar, “were ordered by the United States to support the uprising against
President Assad in Syria and the use of force to overthrow him, and all
three countries have been financing terrorist groups in Syria to accomplish
this. So, Saudi Arabia accusing Qatar of supporting terrorism is laughable.”
Al-Mukhtar adds that the UAE’s trade relations with Iran are more
extensive than those of Qatar, and that the funding and promotion of
Al Jazeera, a television news channel that broadcasts in Arabic across the
Middle East, is the most important factor in the blockade, since the channel’s
news programs regularly feature Arab commentators who talk about
human rights and how governments should answer to the people. “This
is anathema to the four blockading regimes who think the channel is
undermining them and provoking unrest in their populations,” he says.
A second major reason for the blockade is the shared Saudi and U.S.
fear of Iran’s growing power. They want to isolate Iran, a majority Shia
Muslim country, in part by pitting it against a united Sunni (the majority
sect of Islam) front of countries. The Obama administration had opted for
diplomacy, signing a nuclear pact with Tehran as part of efforts to normalize
relations, but Trump is far more hostile to the country, which suits the
Saudi Arabian monarchy much better.
“The Saudis fear that Iran’s nuclear pact with the U.S., the EU and the UN
is allowing Tehran to break out of its economic isolation and turn itself into
a rival power centre in the Middle East,” explains Hallinan. “They also
fear that anything but a united front by the GCC — led by Riyadh — will en
-courage the House of Saud’s internal and external critics. Such fears have
driven the Saudis to make what I think is a major strategic error. The blockade
is not working.”
Instead of separating Qatar from Iran, the blockade has driven the two countries
closer together. Even within the GCC, the blockade is notunanimously accepted,
with Oman and Kuwait refusing to boycott Qatar. Hallinan adds that Egypt, which
supports the blockade, will not break relations with Iran. Other Muslim countries
such as Pakistan and Indonesia reject both the blockade and chilling relations with
Iran, while Morocco and Turkey are sending Qatar supplies.
“The new Saudi regime has made one mistake after another,” says Hallinan.
“It invaded Yemen, thinking it would be a short war, despite being told that
the only place you want to invade less than Afghanistan is Yemen. They
pushed down the price of oil, thinking it would drive marginal competition
out of business and somehow missed the analysis that the Chinese economy
is slowing down, so they are stuck with low oil prices draining their income.
The combination of incompetence and arrogance is just breathtaking.”
Hallinan says this record of failure is matched by that of the U.S. It started
with George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq, followed by Obama’s overthrow of
the Libyan government and his administration’s support for the overthrow
of Assad in Syria. “One can add U.S. support for the Saudis in Yemen. All
these actions have increased Iranian influence, and Russian as well, in the
Middle East,” he argues. The Iraq war removed Iran’s biggest rival in
the region and established a Shia government in Baghdad. Trump’s
encouragement of the Qatar blockade is just the latest U.S. gift to Iran.
Qatar is the world’s third largest producer of natural gas (after Iran and
Russia) and shares ownership with Iran of the North Dome/South Pars
maritime gas reserves, which make up 14% of world gas deposits. This
has made Qatar, with a population of two million, the richest country
per capita in the world. It also makes Qatar economically very strategic.
“The blockade of Qatar has been carried out by Saudi Arabia in consultation
with Washington and I suspect that its main motive is to break this
sharing arrangement for natural gas between Qatar and Iran,” says Michel
Chossudovsky, an emeritus professor of economics at the University of Ottawa
who visited Qatar in July. The U.S. objective is, he claims, to secure geopolitical
control over Qatar’s gas reserves — a familiar motive lurking behind many other
cases of U.S. intervention globally.
Chossudovsky points out that Qatar’s gas fields are entirely owned by the
state; private corporations, including ExxonMobil and several other compa
-nies from Russia, China and Malaysia operate under contracts. In December,
Qatar’s close relations with Russia bore fruit when the state-owned Qatar
Investment Authority bought (with Swiss commodities trader Glencore)
19% of Rosneft, a Russian oil corporation also invested in Qatar’s gas sector.
For years, the U.S. has been unsuccessfully attempting to find an
alternative to Russian gas supplies for Europe by running a pipeline from
the Middle East or Central Asia to the continent, as I wrote about in the
Monitor in May 2010. Russia is the biggest supplier of both oil and gas to
Europe. But according to Chossudovsky, a major effect of the blockade will
be to change planned pipeline routes for Qatar’s gas from travelling through
Saudi Arabia to Europe (via Turkey) to going through Iran (via Iraq and Syria).
This is the route backed by Russia. “Russia’s geopolitical control over gas
pipelines going to Europe has been reinforced as a result of the blockade,” he says.
It’s too early to say the U.S. has been beaten at its own game. Washington
still has substantial influence over Qatar due to its military base there,
and the blockade has made Qatar more anxious than ever to gain U.S.
favour, according to Al-Mukhtar. In July, Tillerson announced the U.S. and
Qatar had signed a memorandum of understanding on fighting terrorism
that includes substantial financial information sharing. “Together, the U.S.
and Qatar will do more to track down funding sources, collaborate and share
information and do more to keep the region and our homeland safe,” said
the secretary of state, adding the deal had been two years in the making.
At the same time, as Al-Mukhtar emphasizes, Iran is also established
as a major power in the Middle East, a development the U.S. was unable to
prevent. Qatar’s close alignment with both countries — the U.S. and Iran —
reflects this complex new reality in the Middle East.
________________________________________________
Published in the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives Monitor, September/October 2017
https://www.policyalternatives.ca/sites/default/files/uploads/publications/National%20Office/2017/09/CCPA%20Monitor%20Sept%20Oct%202017%20WEB.pdf
(Go to pg. 54)
Asad Ismi is the CCPA Monitor’s international affair’s correspondent. He has written extensively on the Middle East and U.S. imperialism.