Saudi bloc says US-Qatar anti-terror pact ‘isn’t enough’

epa06082265 A handout photo made available on 11 July 2017 by the US Department of State shows US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (L) and the Qatari Minister of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani (R) sign a memorandum of understanding in Doha, Qatar on 11 July 2017. Tillerson is on an official visit to Qatar.  EPA/US DEPARTMENT OF STATE HANDOUT  HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY/NO SALES

Bloomberg

The Saudi-led bloc boycotting Qatar said a counter-terrorism pact struck with the US in Doha to strengthen Qatari action against terrorist funding “isn’t enough” to end the Gulf diplomatic crisis.
The alliance, which includes the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt, said Tuesday’s agreement between the US and Qatar came about due to years of pressure from the bloc, according to a joint statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency. They also vowed to maintain the recent measures against Qatar until their demands are met in full.
The memorandum of understanding came as part of US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s sweep through the region in pursuit of a negotiated settlement of the feud, now in its second month. It was the most concrete step the US has taken to end the standoff, which started after the four nations severed diplomatic and trade ties with Qatar on June 5. The bloc accuses the Gulf nation of destabilizing the region by supporting proxies of Shiite-dominant Iran and Sunni extremists, charges it denies.
SAUDI MEETINGS
The US’s top diplomat is meeting Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz and the kingdom’s crown prince in Jeddah on Wednesday, and is also due to hold talks with the foreign ministers of the four nations boycotting Qatar.
The pact with Qatar will change the nature of those discussions, according to Allison Wood, a Middle East and North Africa analyst with Control Risks in Dubai. “It forces the Saudis to be more explicit about their other grievances against Qatar and how they can constructively address them,” Wood said. The agreement lays out a series of steps the two countries will take over the coming months and years to interrupt and disable terrorist financing flows, Tillerson said on Tuesday in Doha.
Qatar “has been quite clear in its positions, and I think very reasonable, and we want to talk now how do we take things forward—that’s my purpose in coming,” he told reporters.
The spat is hurting the economy of Qatar, whose currency, like that of other Gulf nations, is pegged to the US dollar. The longer the dispute goes on, the higher the likelihood Qatar will abandon the peg, according to Commerzbank AG.
“The central bank has to constantly intervene against the depreciation pressure and therefore constantly loses foreign currency reserves,” analyst Lutz Karpowitz said in an emailed note. What’s more, “the economic difficulties of the small country are likely to increase over time,” Karpowitz said.
The Gulf crisis has put the US in a difficult spot. It’s allied with nations on both sides of the dispute. Qatar hosts the regional headquarters for the US Central Command, which includes a state-of-the-art air base the Pentagon depends on to target IS. Saudi Arabia has strong counter-terrorism ties with the US and is the top buyer of American weapons.
The Saudi-led bloc has demanded that Qatar scale back ties with Iran, the Shiite Muslim powerhouse that’s the main rival to Saudi Arabia in the region; sever relations with the Muslim Brotherhood; and shut the Al Jazeera media network that’s riled governments throughout the Middle East.

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