23 Dec 2024
Saturday 1 July 2017 - 15:43
Story Code : 266578

Behind the scenes at the Saudi-Qatari rift

American Herald Tribune | Thomas C. Mountain: Saudi Arabia, with the bellicose support of President Trump, haslaunched a diplomatic and partial economic offensive against theridiculously small state of Qatar and is dragging its allies, theUnited Arab Emirates in particular, into a potential major headache.

You see the de facto capital of the Emirates is Abu Dhabi which usesQatari natural gas to generate half of its electricity via theQatar-Abu Dhabi-Oman pipeline. So if Qatar really felt threatened itwould pull the plug, and at least for a month or so, challenge thevery survival of Abu Dhabi, for how many Emiratis let alone expats
would be able to last +40c/105f temperatures without electricity?

The Emirates capital city would have to import Liquified Natural Gas(LNG) which it doesn't have the infrastructure prepared for as well asconvert its electrical generators to LNG from natural gas, somethingthat could take over a month to get up and running, no matter the$Billions the Emirates have to throw at the problem.

So the Saudis picking a fight with their long time villains, theQatari's, could crash the Emirates economy and put a serious strain onthe so called coalition of the willing, that is those stillcommitted to the quagmire in Yemen and its assorted crimes, anothersource of strain between the two allies.

The Emirates hate the Qatari's, not without reason, and we know thatthe Emirates foreign legion has been concocting nasty plans againstthem in league with a pro-Israel PR Hit Squad in the USA. Still, theEmirates are dependent on Qatari gas so the shit could really hit thefan if the young newly crowned Saudi Prince and de facto commander inchief steps over the line and provokes a Qatari response.

Qatar and Iran, the snake that the Saudis so infamously wanted theCIA to cut the head off of, share the Pars natural gas field under thePersian gulf waters, the 3rd largest such in the world whoseexploitation of has made Qatar the worlds largest natural gasexporter. If Qatar gets into a serious fight with Iran, which is whatthe Saudis are demanding, than the Qatari economy could hit the skidsfor Qatar only exports 600k barrels of oil a day, not nearly enough tosustain its international and domestic commitments.

Reality is the Emirates have much more serious trade relations withIran than Qatar. Oman on the other hand, has even closer economic andpolitical ties with its ancient fraternal brothers and sisters in theland of the Persians and the Saudis arent attacking the Omanis, sowhy the pissing match with Qatar?

Like I said, this animosity is nothing new just the latest flare up,for back in 2014 the Saudis led a break in diplomatic ties that lasted8 months, and are now led by a much more hotheaded royal, in his earlythirties and up until Trump, it seemed that the USA had abandoned theSaudis in favor of the nuclear deal with Iran, taking regime changeoff the table and leaving the Arabs on their own.

These have been scary times for the Arabian peninsula tribes, leadingto amongst other actions, the Emirates giving the UN Security Counciland its sanctions against Eritrea, in other words the USA, the fingerby building its new navy base and airfield in Assab, Eritrea.

Qatar and the royal family of Saud, both installed by the Britishafter WW1, have been at each others throats for many years now. Weknow thanks to Wikileaks the Qatari's were pushing the Americans toengineer a coup against the Saudis while the house of Saud was tryingto restore the grandfather of the present Emir, whose father deposed
his own father in a palace coup and who was forced to abdicate to hisson by the Saudis.

The Saudis cant militarily attack Qatar, not with the largest USmilitary installation in west Asia and everyone knows it. The socalled economic blockade of Qatar has failed so far with Turkeystepping in to provide everything Qatar needs.

True, theAl Jazeerasatelite television channel has been a finger inthe eye of the Saudis and Emirates but AJs main viewer base inAfrica, west and south Asia, over a billion people, is via the twomain satellite channels, Arabsat and Nilesat. These free channels canbe accessed by anyone for as little as $40 for a satellite dish andreceiver and a television. Arabsat is owned by the Saudis and Nilesatby Egypt. They kicked the Iranian Arabic channel off just like theEuropeans kicked off Irans PressTV from their satellite systems. Sowhy is the anti-Qatar lot allowing Al Jazeera to continue to spew itsattacks on them via the big two satellite channels they own?

Why? Its a pissing contest, really, and other than pissing and moaninglittle of anything in the way of real conflict is going on. Maybe thiswill change in time but its hard to see the major powersinternationally allowing this to get out of hand. The Saudiseventually will to try some face saving compromise and Qatar mighthave to eat some crow, but when all is said and done all of it willamount to little more than a urine stain on the political fabric onthe ArabianPeninsula.
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