|
Analysis: Arab summit in Qatar - a
demonstration of weakness
The yearly gathering of Arab leaders which took place this week
in Doha was supposed to be a summit of reconciliation; instead
it laid bare the depth of the chasm in the Arab world, which
was revealed in all its helplessness.
Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi...
Scheduled to run for two days - March 30 and 31 - it closed its
doors at the end of the first day.
It had become clear to the participants that they were going
nowhere: so profound were the differences of opinion that there
was no point of going on and no hope of reaching a
consensus.
Saudi King Abdullah did meet during the summit with Moammar
Gadhafi after an estrangement of six years but that was a very
small step which had no impact on the overall picture.
The closing communiqué paid lip service to the very few points
of agreement between the participants and did not even try to
touch on any of the issues that were on the agenda.
First and foremost among those issues was the Iranian
question.
Iran's subversive activities know no boundaries and impact all
Arab countries to such an extent that they are threatening the
stability of the region.
The pursuit of nuclear capability by the Teheran's Ayatollahs
is felt as a clear and present threat and pushes Arab countries
on the path to a nuclear development of their own, the cost of
which they will find difficult to bear.
And if that was not enough, Iran has launched an all out effort
to promote Shia Islam in predominantly Sunni countries,
endangering the homogeneity of the traditionally conservative
society of those countries.
This has led Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to lash out
publicly against these attempts on a number of occasions over
the past few months.
Morocco went further and cut off diplomatic relations with Iran
over the same issue. Sheikh Qardawi, considered as the leading
religious authority of the Muslim Brothers launched a scathing
attack on Iran.
This did not deter Syria, Hezbollah and Hamas from carrying out
Iran's bidding.
Syria shows no sign of considering severing its strategic ties
to that country in spite of the blandishments of the French
president, and those of the newly elected American president.
Hizbullah refuses to lay down its weapons and threatens
Lebanon's stability. Hamas has dealt a mortal blow to the
Palestinian cause since its brutal takeover of Gaza, and blocks
the establishment of a united Palestinian front to negotiate
with Israel while unsettling Egypt.
As for Iran, it is still holding the three islands in the
Persian Gulf it wrested away from the United Emirates in 1971
and is reinforcing its grasp by building there and reinforcing
its military presence. A high ranking Iranian official stated
recently that Bahrain is an Iranian province, provoking such an
uproar that President Mubarak made an unscheduled visit to
affirm his support to "Arab Bahrain."
The Egyptian president had vainly made an all-out effort in the
weeks preceding the summit, with the help of Saudi Arabia, to
put together a common political agenda for the members of the
Arab league. A meeting in Riyadh two weeks ago between the
leaders of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Bashar Assad led
nowhere, since the Syrian president was adamant in his refusal
to mute his links with Teheran.
The host of the Doha summit, the Emir of Qatar, who has been
moving increasingly closer to Teheran, defended Iran's
position; Al Jazeera, which he owns, kept on attacking Egypt
and supporting Hamas.
Speaking in the name of Mubarak who boycotted the summit, the
head of the Egyptian delegation, Mofid Shihab, said that one
cannot escape reality - the Iranian threat - and that one
should not let non-Arab elements (Iran) interfere in the
internal affairs of Arab countries to promote
dissension.
With reference to Al Jazeera he emphasized that Arab media
should be more responsible, check facts and refrain from
exacerbating differences of opinion between Arab states. But to
no avail. The final communiqué issued a tepid call to Iran to
reach a solution to the problem of the three islands of the
Emirates through negotiation or to turn to the International
Court of Justice.
There were no operational decisions. Once again, Arab leaders
demonstrated their unwillingness to confront the real issues;
once again it appears that they much prefer let the United
States - and Israel - do the work for them.
On one issue the summit had come together: the international
warrant of arrest issued by the attorney-general of the
International Criminal Court against the President of Sudan,
accused of genocide in Darfur and war crimes.
The final communiqué expresses the solidarity of all
participants with Omar Al Bashir and calls for the cancellation
of the arrest warrant, stating that the court's decision was a
grave violation of the sovereignty of Sudan.
This is a most unwelcome development. The Arab League should
have prevented Bashir from coming to Doha and if he did come,
should have insisted on him being arrested, even though Qatar
is not a signatory of the treaty which brought about the
constitution of the ICC (Only three of the League's members are
signatories - Jordan, Djibouti and the Comoros islands).
In fact the Foreign Ministers of the Arab League who prepared
the summit encouraged the Sudanese president through their
draft communiqué submitted to the leaders which emphasized Arab
solidarity with him.
In the name of that same solidarity, participants at the summit
blithely ignored the gravity of the charges and openly defied
the international community and its courts. Genocide
perpetrated by a fellow Arab leader is apparently of no
consequence.
Sad to say, the secretary general of the United Nations saw
nothing wrong in attending the summit together with the
Sudanese leader and listened blank faced at Bashir's tirades
against the UN. His lack of reaction dealt a grave blow to the
ICC.
The conflict with Israel was very much on the agenda, as usual.
The Syrian president, speaking first since he had been
president of the previous summit, heaped coals on a country
accused of not wanting peace and affirmed his support of armed
resistance against Israel.
Top of page
|