Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Arab world completely fractured, 3 Arab nations have withdrawn ambassadors from Qatar over its support for Muslim Brotherhood-BBC

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3/24/14, "The deep discord bedevilling the Arab world," BBC, Gerald Butt, Middle East analyst

"In four decades of covering the Middle East I cannot remember the Arab world being as multilaterally fractured as it is today. Arabs are trapped under a dense and complex cat's cradle of ideological and sectarian differences. 

Even in the one corner of the Middle East where there is a regional body, the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC - comprising Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates), there are fresh challenges.

Formed in 1981 as Britain withdrew from the Gulf, the GCC has failed to achieve its most ambitious targets of economic integration and the establishment of a credible joint defence capability. But today it faces unprecedented discord:
  • Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain have withdrawn ambassadors from Qatar because of the latter's support for the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) in Egypt and elsewhere.
  • Kuwait and Oman have remained neutral in this dispute, so there are now three clearly different camps within the GCC on regional policy and support for the MB.
  •  Saudi Arabia and Bahrain accuse Iran of meddling in their internal affairs by stoking unrest within their Shia communities, while Oman has recently hosted the Iranian foreign minister on an official visit. Oman also angered other GCC states by brokering secret talks between Iran and the United States on the nuclear issue.
Further afield, the list continues:
  • Iraq has accused Saudi Arabia and Qatar of seeking to destabilise the country.
  • Relations between Egypt and Qatar are strained over the MB issue.
  • Saudi Arabia has designated the MB a terrorist group.
  • Egypt has designated Hamas a terrorist group and is keeping Gaza isolated.
  • Syria, embroiled in a civil war with outside backing, has accused Saudi Arabia and Qatar of seeking to undermine the country.
  • Saudi Arabia and Qatar are supporting different factions of the Syrian opposition.
  • The Arab Gulf states, Egypt and Jordan accuse Iraq of acting as an agent of Shia Iran and allowing Iranian arms to reach Syria - and of marginalising the Iraqi Sunni community.
  • Lebanon is divided between those for and against the Syrian government, and for and against Hezbollah's military support for Damascus.
Against this background it will be surprising if many Arab heads of state feel enthusiastic about attending the next summit in Kuwait (Syria is already suspended from the Arab League). An agenda that took into account even a fraction of the above grievances is unimaginable.

Unity has been off the table for many years. Today, meaningful intra-regional co-operation, too, is looking like a distant prospect. 

This leaves individual Arab states to cope alone as best they can with the range of challenges facing the Middle East - that is when the regimes are not preoccupied with fighting for their interests in the maelstrom of regional disputes."



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