25 Apr 2024
Saturday 22 July 2017 - 11:01
Story Code : 269200

'Rift in the Arab world': Iran 'wins' from Qatar diplomatic crisis

Sputnik - The Persian Gulf diplomatic crisis plays in the hands of Iran. Iran is using the current tensions in the Arab world to boost its political and economic influence in the Middle East, according to analyst Vladimir Sazhin.

The Qatari diplomatic crisis seems tohave passed its highest point and is likely toenter the lukewarm phase. Recently, the foreign minister ofthe United Arab Emirates, Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, said that the rift will last forlong and a political solution is not insight.

In June, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Bahrain and the UAE broke offdiplomatic relations and communications withQatar, accusing it ofsupporting terrorism and interfering intheir internal affairs. Kuwait acting asa mediator inthe crisis, handed overto Doha a 13-point ultimatum, which Qatar refused tocomply with.

Meanwhile, the Qatari foreign minister, Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani, said Friday that the tiny Persian Gulf nation is ready tohold talks withthe four Arab nations if they "respect sovereignty and refrain frominterfering inthe countrys internal affairs and stick tointernational laws" inorder tomake a step towardssettling the dispute.

However, the four countries do not seem tobe ready fordiplomacy. In turn, Qatar has been supported bynon-Arab countries, including Iran, and is unlikely tobow tothe demands ofits Arab rivals.

Sputnik Persiansat downwith Vladimir Sazhin, a senior research fellow atthe Institute forOriental Studies ofthe Russian Academy ofSciences, todiscuss the situation aroundQatar and the possible role ofIran inthe ongoing Persian Gulf crisis.
"The four Arab countries failed tobreak downDoha ina massive attack onall fronts. The tiny nation rejected the humiliating ultimatum proposed byhis opponents. But it was no surprise. In 2015, the International Monetary Fund rated Qatar asthe worlds richest country per capita," Sazhin said.
The expert pointed outthat Qatar rejected the ultimatum thanks tothe nations unique economic resources.


"It has gold reserves of26.6 tons. Doha also has $40 billion infinancial reserves and a state-run investment fund with $300 billion. Moreover, Doha has a stable budget surplus of $40 billion. Iran and Turkey also helped Qatar tobreak the blockade," Sazhin said.


The expert suggested that despitethe fact that the current situation aroundQatar is more or less stable, efforts toescalate tensions cannot be ruled outin the future, especially byRiyadh. However, there are several countries supporting Qatar, including the United States, France, Germany, Turkey, Russia and Iran, and their involvement will further contribute tothe easing oftensions.

Commenting onIrans involvement inthe Qatar dispute, Sazhin said that Tehran "won the battle forQatar," which will result inthe further expansion ofIrans political and economic influence both inQatar and acrossthe region.
"Ties betweenDoha and Tehran are pragmatic. Qatar and Iran jointly control a large gas field inthe Persian Gulf. Qatars share inits reserves is estimated at900 trillion cubic feet. According tomedia reports, this gas field accounts fornearly 100 percent ofQatars gas production and over70 percent ofits export revenue. This is why Qatar often has tobalance betweenIran and the interests ofthe Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)," the expert said.


Sazhin added that the Qatar crisis "has split the entire Arab world" and Doha is now onthe verge ofbeing forcefully included fromthe Persian Gulf Cooperation Council. However, according tothe expert, this situation is rather negative forQatars opponents, first ofall Saudi Arabia, thanfor Doha.
"Saudi Arabia wants tounite the Sunni Arab world againstIran. There have also been calls toestablish an anti-Iranian analogue ofNATO inthe Middle East. But the current rift withinthe GCC could derail this plan. Tensions amongArab nations play inthe hands ofIran. Tehran is winning again inthe Middle East," Sazhin said.


The expert also suggested that the Qatari crisis is unlikely toreach the phase ofopen confrontation because all the parties involved have close economic and financial ties betweeneach other and tothe global market. At the same time, according tothe expert, the crisis will not be quickly resolved.


On June 5, a number ofcountries, including Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt cut diplomatic ties withQatar and embargoed all sea, air and land traffic tothe country, accusing Doha ofsupporting terrorist groups, particularly the Muslim Brotherhood terrorist movement, aswell asof interfering inother countries' domestic affairs. Several other states inthe region have reduced diplomatic relations withthe country.

The Qatari Foreign Ministry rejected the accusations ofDoha's interference inother countries' domestic affairs.

Formally, the crisis was triggered aftera Qatari news agency published a statement byQatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani calling forthe establishment ofrelations withIran and expressing support forthe Muslim Brotherhood.

Doha later said that the agency's website was hacked and there was no such statement fromthe Qatari leader. Nevertheless, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain did not accept the explanation. A number ofother states, including Turkey and Kuwait, have been engaged inmediating the crisis.

Later, the four Arab nations handed an ultimatum toQatar, which contained a dozen demands Qatar must meet todefuse the Gulf diplomatic crisis.

The 13-point list demanded that Qatar, amongother things, cut its ties withIran, close a Turkish military base onits soil and shut downAl Jazeera and its affiliates. Other demands call onDoha topublically denounce relations withIslamist groups, end suspected financing ofterrorism and hand overpersons designated asterrorists bySaudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt.

In response, Doha described the demands as "unrealistic" and "illegal" and urged forthem tobe revised.
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