Qatar’s Reconciliation with Its Neighbors Might Not Last https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/politics-current-affairs/2021/01/qatars-reconciliation-with-its-neighbors-might-not-last/

January 25, 2021 | Alberto M. Fernandez
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So far, the most significant event in the Middle East of 2021 has been the formal end to the diplomatic conflict that pitted Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, and Bahrain against Qatar. Alberto M. Fernandez is hopeful about the improvement in relations, but uncertain as to its longevity:

[T]here is much good that could come out of a real reconciliation. The dispute was expensive for both sides, disrupted trade and economic ties, encouraged regional meddling, and generally introduced additional elements of instability and tension into an already unstable region. But was [the step] a true breakthrough, or was it more a pause in what will turn out to be a longer struggle for power?

Certainly, the countries that pushed for this step the most—Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, rather than the United States—are hoping for the best. But I am skeptical because there is a basic problem that has not and probably cannot be resolved: . . . Qatar’s great success in power projection through its Faustian alliance with the partisans of political Islam, especially the Muslim Brotherhood, in the region. This is a fateful relationship seen as a threat by several of its neighbors.

Qatar’s role as the bankroller and backstop of Islamist movements and states (Erdogan’s Turkey and Hamas-ruled Gaza) has brought it regional power. Qatar is a tiny country—it has more Indians and Bangladeshis than Qatari citizens, who constitute only 12 percent of their own country’s population—but it has gained great influence through an adept combination of money, media, and politics. One can decry such an outcome while at the same time marveling that it has proven to be so wildly successful.

Observing some of the recent commentary found in Qatar’s powerful media empire—which includes the anti-American and anti-Semitic Al Jazeera—Fernandez detects many signs the peninsular emirate has not changed its tune.

Read more on MEMRI: https://www.memri.org/reports/was-gcc-reconciliation-summit-pause-or-breakthrough