|
Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
|
August 31, 2017
|
|
It's
Time for Qatar to Stop Its Regional Meddling
by Abha Shankar
IPT News
August 31, 2017
|
|
|
Share:
|
Be the
first of your friends to like this.
Bahrain is
threatening to file a complaint with the United Nations Security
Council and the International Criminal Court against fellow Gulf state
Qatar for supporting terrorism and interfering in Bahrain's internal
affairs.
Qatar has engaged in "fourth generation warfare crimes" to
destabilize Bahrain, a senior official told the Saudi-owned Al Arabiya news
organization last week. "Fourth generation warfare" is described
as "a concept of warfare that is decentralized, utilizes terrorism as
a tactic and relies on media manipulation."
A Bahraini TV documentary alleges that the Qatar-financed Academy of
Change used "claims of peaceful activism" to push for regime
change in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait.
The documentary, "Academy of Destruction," aired confessions that key figures affiliated with the
academy "were sent to Manama to execute the Qatari goal to spread
incitement and chaos to topple the regime in Bahrain."
The academy is headed by Hisham Morsi, the son-in-law of blacklisted
Muslim Brotherhood cleric Yusuf
al-Qaradawi.
Qatar's financial backing of the global Islamist Muslim Brotherhood
movement and chummy ties with Iran have helped fuel regional unrest that threatens to
destabilize existing regimes in the boycotting countries.
Doha's meddling in the internal affairs of regional Arab states led
Bahrain – along with Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Egypt – to impose an economic and diplomatic blockade in early
June.
The boycotting countries issued a list of 13 demands to lift the embargo. Those demands call on
Qatar to cut its support for the Muslim Brotherhood and scale down its
ties with Iran.
Qatar rejected the demands saying they violate its sovereignty, causing
the boycotting states to replace them with six broad principles urging Doha "to refrain from
interfering in the internal affairs of States and from supporting illegal
entities."
One alleged conspiracy had Qatar working with Iran to overthrow the
Bahraini regime during the Arab Spring protests of 2011, Al Arabiya reported. Bahraini TV broadcast a recording alleged to be a conversation between Qatar's
former Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber al-Thani and Bahraini
Shia dissident Sheikh Ali Salman plotting to oust Bahrain's ruling
al-Khalifa family.
This revelation built upon an earlier report that Hamad bin Jassim masterminded a
2011 Qatar-sponsored initiative to work with Iran and Bahraini opposition
groups, in particular Ali Salman's Al-Wefaq Society, to foment unrest and
destabilize the region.
The broader Iranian-Saudi struggle for Middle East dominance has made Doha's cozy
relationship with Tehran a point of contention with the Riyadh-led quartet.
Bahrain holds Qatar responsible for "media incitement, support for
armed terrorist activities and funding linked to Iranian groups to carry out
sabotage and spreading chaos" in the island nation. Since a Saudi-led military intervention in Bahrain in 2011
sought to quell weeks of Shia-dominated demonstrations against the ruling
al-Khalifa Sunni monarchy, the country has been hit by sporadic protests by its majority Shia community
that were reportedly backed by Qatar.
Tehran sees Bahrain as a historic part of Iran and sees Saudi efforts to
suppress the Shiite popular revolt as an "invasion," making Bahrain a proxy
battleground for the regional rivals. Riyadh, in turn, accuses Doha of supporting Iran-allied rebels in Yemen,
known as Houthis.
Things came to a head between Qatar and the Saudi-led quartet in April
when Doha agreed to pay $1 billion in ransom to Iranian security officials
and an al-Qaida-affiliated Syrian Islamist group. The deal, reported to be "the straw that broke the camel's
back," secured the release of 26 Qataris, including members of the
royal family, kidnapped during a hunting trip to Iraq.
Problems with Qatar have been festering for some time. In 2013-2014,
Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani signed the Riyadh Agreements, but then failed to live up to its
commitments. The agreements sought to build "a new phase of fraternal
relations" and called on Qatar to stop supporting the Muslim
Brotherhood. Qatar also promised not to support rebel factions fighting
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries in Yemen and Egypt.
Neither pledge was fulfilled.
In addition to its ties to Iran, Qatar's support for various Brotherhood
movements is another sore point. Since the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings, Doha
has gone all-out to embrace Muslim Brotherhood branches in Egypt, Gaza,
Libya, Syria and Tunisia. The tiny but gas-rich Gulf state pumped billions of dollars into the former Muslim
Brotherhood-led government in Egypt, armed and aided Islamist rebel
factions in Libya and Syria, and pledged millions to the Brotherhood's
Palestinian terrorist offshoot Hamas. Its government-backed Al
Jazeera news network has helped advance Islamist agendas and provided a platform
to Hamas and Muslim Brotherhood dissidents from other Gulf countries and
Egypt.
Although the UAE and Saudi Arabia had earlier embraced Muslim
Brotherhood members fleeing repression in their home countries, the Gulf
monarchies subsequently had a falling out with the Islamist movement after
its local networks sought to politicize Islam. In a 2002 interview, the late Saudi Prince Nayef Bin Abdl
Aziz famously alleged the Brotherhood sought to "politicize Islam for
self-serving purposes" and claimed "that the root of all our
problems and issues is the Muslim Brotherhood."
In March 2011, several members of the UAE's al-Islah organization signed
a political petition that demanded "an elected
parliament with legislative powers" leading to a major crackdown on the Islamist group. A Facebook group
"The UAE Revolution" called for "a revolution against the
era of Sheikhs, a revolution against oppression and suppression of freedoms
in the UAE, a revolution against those who have looted from the people of
the UAE."
More than 65 members of al-Islah were sentenced up to 15 years in the UAE in July 2013 for
plotting to overthrow the Gulf monarchy in a trial contested by human
rights groups. In an opinion piece the previous month, Emirati political
analyst Sultan Sooud al-Qassemi had called the Brotherhood "the
greatest threat to the UAE" and urged the Gulf monarchy to "take
immediate measures to show that it will not stand for such threats"
from the Islamist movement.
Egypt turned into another battleground for the Gulf monarchies in the
wake of the Arab Spring. Relations between Qatar and Saudi Arabia became strained when a Muslim Brotherhood-led government came
to power in Egypt in 2012. President Mohammad Morsi's government backed
uprisings against Arab monarchies and engaged in outreach to Riyadh's arch rival Iran. Doha, on the
other hand, provided Morsi's government billions of dollars in aid.
After the military ousted Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood-led government in July
2013, Saudi Arabia and the UAE together offered $8 billion in aid to help pump up the Egyptian
economy. The Muslim Brotherhood was subsequently designated a terrorist organization by Saudi Arabia,
the UAE, and Egypt.
Qatar's maverick foreign policy seeks to use Iran, the Muslim
Brotherhood and other extremists as strategic weapons to upend Saudi
dominance and further destabilize the Middle East. The Muslim Brotherhood's
successes in overthrowing regimes in Egypt, Tunisia, and other places in
its quest for a global Caliphate has Saudi Arabia and the UAE worried that
Qatar's support may invigorate the Brotherhood in the Gulf monarchies and
create civil unrest.
Qatar just restored full diplomatic ties with Iran that broke off
last year following attacks on Saudi diplomatic facilities in Tehran.
Doha's close ties to the Islamic Republic will ensure continued
collaboration with Iran-backed terrorist groups in Saudi Arabia's restive
eastern region of Qatif and Bahrain. Doha will also continue supporting
Iran-backed Houthi militias in Yemen complicating the existing political,
military, and humanitarian crisis in the country, where a Saudi-led
military intervention is underway.
Qatar points to "Saudi and Emirati hypocrisy" by
arguing that both the Gulf monarchies have a "shameful history"
of support for terror and extremism; so why is the island Gulf nation being
singled out? But Doha misses a key point: The question is not so much about
either side's support for terror as it is about the bigger and more
important issue of regional stability Qatar needs to recognize this fact
and refrain from falling victim to its contentious history and the ambitions of its post-1995
leadership that wants Doha to pursue an independent foreign policy and be a
major power in the region. Qatar's failure to stop colluding with
destabilizing elements to pursue its regional ambitions will only end up
throwing the Middle East into deeper chaos.
Related Topics: Abha
Shankar, Qatar,
Saudi
Arabia, Muslim
Brotherhood, Hamas
funding, Gulf
state tensions, Academy
of Change, Hisham
Morsi, Hamad
bin Jassim bin Jaber al-Thani, Ali
Salman, Al-Wefaq
Society, Houthis,
Riyadh
Agreements, Al-Islah
|
The IPT accepts no funding from
outside the United States, or from any governmental agency or political or
religious institutions. Your support of The Investigative Project on
Terrorism is critical in winning a battle we cannot afford to lose. All
donations are tax-deductible. Click here to donate online. The
Investigative Project on Terrorism Foundation is a recognized 501(c)3
organization.
202-363-8602
- main
202-966-5191
- fax
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment