GCC summit cut short by a day
amid diplomatic rift
NEWS / KUWAIT
GCC Kuwait Middle East Qata
The GCC summit in Kuwait is among the most
significant official encounters since a Saudi-led
group of countries imposed a blockade on Qatar
[Ahmed Hagagy/Reuters]
A key regional summit of the six-nation
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC )
countries has been cut short and will
conclude on Tuesday instead of
Wednesday, with all the delegates
leaving Kuwait after a closed session.
The Kuwait summit takes place exactly
six months after three of the member
states severed diplomatic and trade ties
with Qatar .
The move comes as the United Arab
Emirates (UAE) announced that it had
formed a new economic and military
partnership with Saudi Arabia separate
from the GCC.
It is clear now that Emiratis and
Saudis have no intention of
supporting stability in the GCC,
no intention of supporting
Kuwait's mediation efforts, and
no intention to end the crisis
one or other.
MAJED AL-ANSARI, QATAR UNIVERSITY
"So far it is not looking promising at the
summit after the limited optimism in
the beginning when the six member
states agreed that they would meet in
Kuwait to break the diplomatic
impasse," said Al Jazeera's Jamal
Elshayyal, reporting from Kuwait City.
"Bahrain has decided to send a third
level diplomat, the deputy prime
minister and Saudi Arabia has sent
Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir instead
of a royal family member.
"It's clear the summit won't yield any of
the positive outcomes that we thought."
'The GCC is effectively dead'
Qatar's emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad
Al Thani, has arrived in Kuwait City for
the summit, but heads of states from
the three blockading countries - Saudi
Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain - will not
make it to the summit.
Oman said that a high ranking official
would represent Sultan Qaboos bin Said
al Said, while Foreign Minister Adel al-
Jubeir will lead the Saudi delegation at
the 38th annual summit.
The agenda of this year's summit, one
of the most significant official
encounters since the crisis erupted in
June, has not been made public, but the
Gulf crisis will be a top priority.
Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and the UAE cut
ties with Qatar on June 5 after accusing
it of supporting "terrorism", allegations
that Qatar strongly denies.
"It seems that there is an intention by
the by the Saudis and Emiratis,
especially with the timing of the
announcement [of the new partnership]
today, to say that the GCC is effectively
dead," said Majed al-Ansari from Qatar
University.
"It is clear now that Emiratis and Saudis
have no intention of supporting
stability in the GCC, no intention of
supporting Kuwait's mediation efforts,
and no intention to end the crisis one
or other."
Qatar for dialogue
The talks could define the very future
of the bloc that was established in 1981
for closer economic, trade and security
partnerships on the Arabian Peninsula.
In October, Kuwait's emir, Sheikh Sabah
Al Ahmad Al Sabah, who has been
mediating the standoff, warned of the
potential collapse of the GCC if the
crisis continued.
In late October, the king of Bahrain said
his country would not take part in any
summit or meeting attended by Qatar
unless Doha "corrects its approach".
Qatar's emir has agreed to resolve the
crisis through dialogue, but Kuwait's
call for talks has not been accepted by
the blockading countries.
The ongoing war in Yemen is also
expected to be a topic of discussion. A
Saudi-led coalition has been bombing
the poorest nation in the Middle East
since March 2015, creating one of the
biggest humanitarian disasters of
modern times.
The killing of former Yemeni President
Ali Abdullah Saleh on Monday by the
Houthi rebels, who control vast
expanses of the country, has thrown
the country into deeper chaos.
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