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Qatar under Siege: Regional Implications and Ramifications for the Palestinian Arena
By Kobi Michael, Yoel Guzansky, INSS, June 12, 2017
Jun 12, 2017 - 10:00:15 AM

The severing of relations between Qatar and the Arab states, led by Saudi Arabia and Egypt, on the grounds that Qatar has been supporting terrorism, which follows on the heels of President Trump’s visit to Saudi Arabia, will have serious regional implications. Closing Qatar’s sea and air space and the land border with Saudi Arabia are tantamount to casus belli and could lead to chaos in the emirate if not solved soon. Isolating Qatar will also have serious regional implications on Israel and the Palestinian arena. Qatar is one of the main financial supporters of the reconstruction Gaza Strip, in addition to paying salaries within the Hamas government and helping to provide services to Gaza Strip residents. Its isolation could lead to a decrease in its support for the Gaza Strip and push Hamas into the open arms of Iran. Although fighting terrorism is in the interests of Israel and the United States, Israel would be wise to advise the US administration not to paint Qatar into the corner, if only because this would push it further towards Iran.

The foreign policy of the six Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) members—Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain, Kuwait, and Oman—has never been a model of cooperation and unity. Even the dramatic severing of relations with Qatar and closing the aerial, territorial, and naval spheres to it—as initiated by Saudi Arabia and the UAE—is not indicative of a change. Kuwait has, again, chose to sit this one out, as in similar instances in the past. Egypt, Bahrain, the recognized government of Yemen, and the Maldives have joined the move, as have Jordan and Morocco, to a limited extent, joined Saudi Arabia, that is setting the tone for the move.

Beyond the official justifications provided for this step, as well as the implied or covert ones (e.g., the mutual loathing between the Saudi Arabian monarch and the Qatari emir, or the emir’s meeting with the Iranian Revolutionary Guards commander, or rumors of a Russian cyberattack), which focus attention on the relationship between Qatar and the Arab sphere and Iran, it is also important to consider the possible ramifications of the crisis—the most severe one since the founding of the GCC in 1981—on the Israeli-Palestinian arena.

During his visit to Saudi Arabia, President Trump lumped Hamas, ISIS, and radical Islam together, casting them as a single terrorist entity, and made it clear that the United States would have zero tolerance for states supporting terrorism. It is safe to assume that these remarks provided an excuse for several states to make this move of severing relations at this time by accusing Qatar of supporting terrorism and aiding subversives within their own borders. Qatar announced the expulsion of several operatives of Hamas’ military wing before the diplomatic relations were severed, but this was insufficient to prevent the move. And while Qatar’s decision to expel these Hamas members from the country may have only a slight effect on Qatar-Hamas relations and the role Qatar plays in the Gaza Strip and its influence on the Palestinian arena, the move led by Saudi Arabia and Egypt, if not solved, has the potential to have a much greater impact.

Qatar plays a crucial role in the reconstruction efforts in the Gaza Strip, both financially—as the largest donor nation—and politically, thanks to its influence over Hamas’ leadership, which depends on Qatar to serve as its channel of communication with Israel—from paying salaries of Hamas officials and financing the supply of electricity from Israel to Gaza, to passing messages and helping the reconstruction efforts. Israel’s attitude to Qatar is dualistic. While Israel rues Qatar’s support for Hamas and the sponsorship it extends to the organization’s leader and is angry at it for having derailed the efforts to attain a ceasefire in the spirit of the Egyptian proposal during Operation Protective Edge, Israel also attributes importance to Qatar’s contribution to Gaza reconstruction efforts, the financial aid it provides to pay for salaries, and the provision of services to Gaza Strip inhabitants, as well as the very fact of a long-lasting relationship with an Arab state. Israel recognizes that the benefits of cooperation with the emirate outweigh its drawbacks, including curbing Iran and weakening its influence over Hamas and events in Gaza.

Qatar’s romance with the Muslim Brotherhood (especially in Egypt) and, as a derivative, also with Hamas, is an outlier compared to the traditional tendency of the other GCC members, which, along with the solidarity expressed for Palestinian national aspirations and their responses to Arab public opinion, have been suspicious if not downright hostile to Hamas and the ideology it represents. They see Hamas as a militant faction of the Muslim Brotherhood, threatening Egyptian national security, (i.e., the regime), destabilizing the Palestinian Authority regime, and representative of the capabilities of Islamist movements to seize the reins of government.

Qatar’s support for Hamas and its investments in the Gaza Strip are part and parcel of the tiny emirate’s survivalist foreign policy and its attempts to make leave a mark and increase its influence. The American security backing (the US Central Command for example, is located in Qatar) is another factor enabling the diplomatic maneuverability of Qatar, one of the richest nations on earth in terms of per capita GDP, as it knows its national security is ensured. In more than a few cases, the United States has taken advantage of Qatar’s connections with various players, including terrorist organizations such as Hamas, and asked it to serve as mediator. Qatar believes that because of its relations with entities such as Iran, the Taliban, and Hamas, it has acquired influence alongside insurance against their wrath.

As part of its activity, the emirate is investing in the West Bank (e.g., the new Palestinian city of Rawabi) and even in Israel’s Arab sector; but most of its support, which was increased after a visit in 2012 by the former emir, Hamad bin Khalifa, is devoted to the Gaza Strip. The emirate’s support for Hamas, larger than any other Arab state’s support, is expressed in strengthening the governing capabilities of Hamas, especially by paying salaries and ensuring the regular supply of electricity from Israel, and promoting—with Israel’s approval and help—humanitarian and infrastructural projects in the Gaza Strip. There have even been reports of Qatari attempts to mediate between Israel and Hamas in exchanging POWs, the promoting the construction of a seaport off the Gaza Strip, and transferring aid to the Gazan population.

The severing of diplomatic relations by the group of Arab states led by Saudi Arabia and Egypt and President Trump’s statements identifying the move as an achievement of US policy and an important step in uprooting Islamic terrorism and curbing Iran’s moves in the region are isolating Qatar. Closing the sea and air space and the land border with Saudi Arabia are tantamount to casus belli and could lead to chaos in the emirate is mediation efforts led by Kuwait do not bear fruit soon. Even if the United States comes to Qatar’s aid and tries to mediate and calm the waters, given Qatar’s importance to the Americans, it is obvious that Qatar will be forced to pay a price. Whatever that price turns out to be, its effort will be felt in its relationship with Hamas and Iran.

Trammeling Qatar might also lead to its marginalization in the Gaza Strip and a decrease or cessation of its support for Hamas, at least at the declarative level. If Hamas fails to improve its relations with the pragmatic Sunni camp, when the price for that is also a change in its policy vis-à-vis the PA and Israel, Hamas might find itself isolated, which, as a last option, could drive it into Iran’s arms. Such a scenario raises the probability for another round of violence in the Gaza Strip and a worsening of the humanitarian crisis there.

Preserving Qatar’s status in the Gaza Strip and its continued contribution to the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip are at odds with the importance Israel attributes to expanding relations with the pragmatic Sunni camp. Israel’s effort to mitigate the positions of the pragmatic Sunni states towards Hamas and Qatar flies in the face of that camp’s preference for restoring the PA to the Gaza Strip and hemming Qatar in. In this convoluted reality, it would be wise of Israel to encourage more extensive and direct involvement of the pragmatic Sunni camp in the Gaza Strip, if only to serve as a counterweight to Iran.

The current move is an escalation compared to the pressure these states exerted on Qatar in 2014. This time, there is also a serious economic siege meant to exert pressure on the emir to change his policy, and perhaps even, as some suggest, to topple him. Israel would be wise to reach an understanding with the US administration not to paint Qatar into the corner, if only because this would push it further into Iranian arms. Israel’s interest is for Washington to offer a compromise that would allow the sides a way out while saving face and simultaneously take advantage of this opportunity to bring Qatar—an important strategic asset of the United States, militarily speaking—to fulfill some of its earlier and still unrealized commitments, such as cooling relations with Iran and the Muslim Brotherhood in the Arab world, including Hamas.

On June 7, 2017, there were reports of a phone call between President Trump and the emir of Qatar in which the former offered his help to resolve the crisis. We may be seeing an opportunity to enlist the pragmatic Sunni camp together with Qatar, which has been put in its place, towards a broad move of rebuilding the Gaza Strip in conjunction with the PA and the incorporation of the latter in the Gaza Strip’s external perimeter. With Israel’s help and the active presence of the PA, it is possible to establish protected spheres of energy, water, and employment infrastructures critical to the Gaza Strip in its external perimeter. It may be that the right political move can turn the emerging troubles of Qatar and Hamas into a crucial lever for reshaping the reality of Gaza and, at a later date, that of the Israeli-Palestinian track.

Even if action against radical Islamic movements and their supporters is a clear American and Israeli interest, Washington’s support for the move against Qatar — as implied by President Trump’s tweets on Twitter and later in a press conference in the White House (which were later toned down by other members of the administration) — and an exaggerated force of the pressure bearing against it are liable to increase instability in the Gulf, raise the explosive potential of the situation in the Gaza Strip, and make it even more difficult for the United States to get the Sunni camp lined up behind it.



Source: Ocnus.net 2017