https://scroll.in/article/839891/donald-trumps-idea-of-fighting-terrorism-taking-orders-from-saudi-arabia

OPINION

Donald Trump’s idea of fighting terrorism: Taking orders from Saudi Arabia
The US president also happened to sign a deal worth $110 billion in
Riyadh last month.

5 hours ago

Rohan Venkataramakrishnan

US President Donald Trump has an odd formula for combating terrorism:
Do what Saudi Arabia says. On Tuesday, Trump attempted to claim credit
for what could, in his words, perhaps “be the beginning of the end to
the horror of terrorism”. Except this beginning referred to actions
taken by Saudi Arabia, whom leaked US cables once called the “most
significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist groups worldwide”. On
Monday, a group of countries led by Saudi Arabia broke off ties with
Qatar, a small Gulf Arab nation that often defies Riyadh’s line,
claiming they were acting to end the country’s funding for militancy.

On Tuesday, Trump attempted to take some credit for causing the West
Asian diplomatic crisis on Twitter.

During my recent trip to the Middle East I stated that there can no
longer be funding of Radical Ideology. Leaders pointed to Qatar -
look!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 6, 2017
So good to see the Saudi Arabia visit with the King and 50 countries
already paying off. They said they would take a hard line on
funding...

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 6, 2017
...extremism, and all reference was pointing to Qatar. Perhaps this
will be the beginning of the end to the horror of terrorism!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 6, 2017
All of that sounds good, except like most things that the US president
posts on Twitter its either hopelessly naive, horribly misguided,
intentionally malicious or a combination of the three.

Trump in Saudi Arabia
Last month, Trump chose Saudi Arabia as his first port of call in his
inaugural trip abroad as US president. There, in addition to signing
defence deals worth $110 billion with Riyadh, Trump also inaugurated a
Global Center for Combating Extremist Ideology alongside the Saudi
king and the president of Egypt (which featured a hilariously ominous
image of the leaders placing their hands on a glowing orb).

Through his tweets, Trump has quite clearly explained what happened.

Trump in Saudi:

"You gotta stop supporting ISIS"

"N-no thats not us... its Qatar"

"Take care of it"

"Consider it done"

*inks deal*

— Love Poasting (@LovedPoasting) June 5, 2017
Holy shit, @LovedPoasting was right pic.twitter.com/hdBc17ALH4

— aris roussinos (@arisroussinos) June 6, 2017
Remember, this is the same Trump who is battling the American
judiciary to effect a travel ban on Muslim nations as a way of keeping
the US safe from terrorism. That ban, which was later struck down by
courts, curiously did not include citizens of either Egypt or Saudi
Arabia, despite the latter’s well-known history of funding terror and
nurturing extremism. Indeed, even as Trump is promising a beginning to
the end of terror, the British government has decided to permanently
hide a report that, according to the Guardian, points to Saudi Arabia
as the major source of Islamist funding.

Trump & terror
Yet Trump nevertheless went to Saudi Arabia, signed a deal with
hundreds of billions of dollars to give the Saudis weapons, and then,
based on his tweet, told them to take a tough line on terror funding.
Saudi Arabia’s way of doing this appears involves leading a large
coalition of governments to break ties with Qatar, force its citizens
to leave their countries and even attempt a partial travel blockade.

There are a number of reasons why this is problematic:

1. Qatar is not just an American ally, it also plays host to Al Udeid
Air Base, America’s largest military base in West Asia. Al Udeid is
home to the forward headquarters of America’s Central Command, which
ran the US military’s operations in both Iraq and Afghanistan. Any
danger to Qatar would imperil a huge, key American asset as well.

2. The American ambassador to Qatar does not seem to agree with her
own president’s assessment. On June 5, the day that Saudi Arabia broke
off ties, she retweeted previous statements from the US government,
albeit under the last administration, appreciating Qatar for its role
in combating the funding of terror. Indeed, the very next, the
Pentagon also said it continues to be grateful to Qatar for its
“enduring commitment to regional security,” despite Trump’s tweets.

2. The American Federal Bureau of Investigation recently sent a team
to Doha to help the Qatari government investigate the alleged hacking
of Qatar’s official news agency, which in May published remarks by the
country’s king that sparked this latest crisis. The remarks, which
suggested Qatar was getting closer to Iran, were later denied by the
Qatari authorities who said they had been planted by hackers. If the
US is aware that this crisis might have been manufactured, reportedly
by Russian hackers, then its hard line on Qatar seems even more
incongruous.

4. That Trump took to Twitter to throw an American ally under the bus,
without even briefing the ambassador or the Pentagon, might send a
message to other US allies as well. As the New York Times’ Max Fisher
pointed out in a series of tweets, “Qatar’s biggest aim in accepting
the [military] base was to get US guarantee against Saudi Arabia.
Their US insurance plan turned out to be worthless... How many allies
have to now ask: Is our US insurance plan also worthless? Can another
ally get Trump to abandon us overnight?”

5. Consider the coalition that Trump is allying with: Saudi Arabia,
UAE, Bahrain, Egypt, Libya, Maldives and what remains of Yemen. It is
not as if Qatar has any democratic claims to its name, and Doha has
credibly been accused of funding terror in the past. Yet the countries
standing with Qatar – Iran and Turkey – not only have some level of
democracy, they also help break the simplistic Western narrative that
the West Asian crises are the outcome of a century old Shia-Sunni
divide. Sunni Qatar is being supported by Shia Iran and a mixed
Turkey, both of which are non-Arab nations. Which of these groupings
seems more likely to play a role in helping end Islamist terror?

What’s going on?
The Barack Obama years were deeply troublesome for Saudi Arabia. For
one, former US President Obama supported the democratic uprisings in a
number of Arab states, a line that made the Saudi ruling family
nervous about its own precarious position. Obama also signed a
historic deal with Iran, the country that Riyadh sees as the biggest
rival to its own influence in the region. Coupled with Qatar’s
willingness to compete for influence in the neighbourhood, either
through the coverage of the Arab Spring or by funding militants in
wars in Libya and Syria, Saudi Arabia spent much of the Obama years
convinced it would need to look beyond the US for real support.

Trump seems to have changed all of that. The new US president has
always claimed the Iran deal was terrible for America, though he has
done little to actually repeal it. And choosing Saudi Arabia for his
very first foreign visit sends a clear message. As a result, Riyadh
seems to have taken its cue from Trump and made a major effort to to
recapture all the influence it lost over the last decade by making an
example out of Qatar, a country it has repeatedly tried to dominate in
the past (including through coup attempts).

But actual policy is not so easy. Trump’s stance is likely to foster
anti-Americanism in one of the few Arab nations that has never had a
major issue with it, will endanger extensive Qatari investments in the
US and raise questions about the utility of the Al Udeid base. Is the
US president prepared to handle all that fallout at a moment when West
Asia is already volatile?



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Peace Is Doable

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