The decision by some Persian Gulf and Arab
nations to cut diplomatic ties with Qatar is indicative of the deep
crisis brewing in the region over the lack of real Sunni leadership •
Treading lightly, this situation may present an opportunity for Israel.
Maj. Gen. (ret.) Yaakov Amidror - Israel Hayom
Fog crawling across the
Qatari capital of Doha
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Photo credit: EPA |
The decision by Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Yemen, and other Arab nations to sever
diplomatic ties with Qatar is a sign of weakness. The fact that the
Sunni Arab world was unable to impose its basic approach on a small
peninsular emirate is indicative of the deep crisis brewing in the Gulf
over the lack of real leadership in the Sunni world.
Sunnis are the vast majority in the Muslim
world, making up some 85% of Muslims, and yet somehow, the Iran-led
Shiite minority is the driving force behind the processes moving the
Middle East.
Still, the diplomatic crisis in the Gulf is
unlikely to be the result of U.S. President Donald Trump's visit to the
region last month, or any other encouragement by the United States, as
evident by the confused reactions coming out of Washington.
The Saudi-led move against Qatar is most
likely the result of a process during which the moderate Sunni leaders
have come to realize that they will be unable get Qatar to align with
the status quo they are trying to create as a group. The moderate Sunni
leaders are wary of Iran's power, as well as of the radical Sunni groups
and a potential reoccurrence of the Arab Spring that rattled the Middle
East in 2011.
Unlike its neighbors, Qatar has been pursuing
its own independent policy on these three issues, playing all elements
against the middle. This two-faced policy -- Qatar hosts one of the
largest U.S. military bases in the Persian Gulf while maintaining close
ties with Iran, the U.S.'s biggest rival in the region -- was working
for Doha, but that no longer seems to be the case.
Qatar is ostensibly part of a group of Sunni
states that seek to maintain the status quo in the region, but at the
same time, it is the main supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood and of
Hamas, the Brotherhood's Palestinian arm, and many of the Gaza
Strip-based terrorist group's officials live in Doha.
Saudi Arabia also loathes the Muslim
Brotherhood, and the Arab states claim that Qatar also aids jihadi
groups such as al-Qaida and Islamic State, although these allegations
are not necessarily solid.
Another major claim the Gulf states have made
against Qatar concerns its influential Al Jazeera news network, which
plays a key role in agitating the Arab street against Doha's neighboring
regimes. It was instrumental in mobilizing the masses against Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak in 2011, as well as in trying to turn the
Egyptian people against Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi when he expelled the
Muslim Brotherhood from power in Egypt in 2014.
Al Jazeera is boisterously critic of other
regimes as well, but it falls silent when it comes to criticizing the
Qatari regime, despite the fact that the majority of the emirate's
residents -- some 88% -- are foreigners, mainly foreign workers.
As in many other areas, Qatar has a two-faced
approach toward Israel. On the one hand, it allows Israelis to visit and
fly with Qatar Airways, one of the region's major long-haul carriers,
while on the other hand it is the only Arab nation propping up Hamas,
hosting terrorists who use Doha as a base of operations against Israel.
The Gulf states threatened to downgrade their
diplomatic ties with Qatar several years ago, but at the time a
compromise was reached. Things appear different this time as despite
Kuwait and Oman's mediation efforts, the volatile situation in the
Middle East and the sense of mutual support among the nations that have
come together on the boycott, have made the region's leaders adamant to
put an end to the Qatari game.
One must remember that despite the oil-rich
principality's legendary wealth, Qatar is highly dependant on its
neighbors, particularly on Saudi Arabia for goods.
Should the Sunni gambit succeed and Qatar
suspends its relations with Iran, cease its support of the Muslim
Brotherhood and perhaps also Hamas, impose severe restrictions on Al
Jazeera, and stops being friendly to extremist elements in the Sunni
world, this could prove a very important step toward forming a cohesive
Sunni camp.
Such a Sunni alliance would be crucial to
containing Iran's aspirations in the region, and in many ways, effective
Sunni leadership could bring about important changes in the Middle
East.
Israel would have to find a way to work with such an
entity, but as such a potential alliance and Israel would have common
enemies, this would be a true opportunity for Israel, one that could
perhaps be leveraged with the handful of nations that have come together
so far
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