Release
Of Al Jazeera Journalists Will Confirm Regional Realignment
Saeed Naqvi
My crystal ball tells me that the three
Al Jazeera journalists, incarcerated in Cairo for the past six months, are
about to be released.
The three were part of Egypt’s most
powerful news bureau during the brief spell of President Mohammad Morsi, of the
Muslim Brotherhood.
The US State department saw Morsi as a
positive evolution from the Arab Spring. But later Washington changed its tune
when crowds supporting Gen. Abdel Fattah el-Sisi came out on the streets
against Morsi. These crowds also described President Barack Obama and US
ambassador Anne Patterson as opponents of secular democracy.
The Emir of Qatar had consistently
allowed his abiding antipathy towards the House of Saud to extend to the way Al
Jazeera covered regional events. Clearly on his signal, Al Jazeera proceeded to
report the truth during the occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq, exposing the
Saudi-US collusion in both instances. Later when the US appeared to be
initially endorsing the Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo as a consequence of the Arab
Spring, Qatar felt even more emboldened to join what looked like a winning
consensus.
As in several instances of US policy,
one hand appears not to have known what the other was doing. It did not
register with some US policy makers, that the rise and consolidation of the
Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt was anathema to its principal allies in the region
– Riyadh and Jerusalem.
Riyadh has nightmares because Muslim
Brotherhood is deeply political and anti monarchy. Little wonder, the Saudis
placed twelve billion dollars in President Sisi’s hand the minute he ousted
Morsi. Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel had earlier endorsed the switch in Cairo.
Israel too was deeply uncomfortable with
the Brothers in Egypt having links with Hamas which was patronized by a Qatar
flushed with petro dollars.
Al Jazeera was in clover so long as
Morsi and Qatar were in silken dalliance. But as soon as Morsi was ousted,
their journalists were incarcerated. They have been in jail for six months.
President Sisi is too beholden to Riyadh and cannot be seen to be obliging a
Saudi rival, the Emir of Qatar, by releasing journalists of a channel the Emir
owns.
Why then is my crystal predicting that a
release of the journalists is imminent? Because King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia
and Shaikh Sabah al Sabah of Kuwait at the recent GCC summit in Riyadh exerted
every muscle to bring Qatar back into the GCC fold. They went some lengths in
that direction by holding the December summit in Doha to confer GCC
chairmanship on Qatar. The release of the journalists will help end the
Doha-Cairo chill.
This is bad news for Tayyip Erdogan
whose interest in the Muslim Brotherhood is of another order. In fact his
dilemma is acute. He works under the Ataturk Constitution where secularism is
non negotiable. He can never openly embrace Muslim Brotherhood but after his
Syria misadventure everyone knows he is of that persuasion.
The situation now is this. Saudis will
leave no stone unturned to keep the Brothers from gaining influence anywhere.
Erdogan has hitched his doubtful regional future to the Brotherhood. This he
imagines gives him traction in Egypt, Gaza, Qatar and Jordan – both, in the
street as well as in the basement.
This also brings him into Saudi Arabia’s
firing line. Just as this Saudi-Turkish rivalry is boiling over, the Riyadh
Summit of the GCC has approved a list of 83 terrorist organizations including
some in the US which are allegedly linked to the Muslim Brotherhood. The Saudi
are clearly trying to excavate along some faultlines in Washington. The idea is
to mobilize opinion in the West against the Brothers.
Recently the British government was
pressured by the GCC to crack down on British Muslim groups affiliated to the
Muslim Brotherhood. London launched an official inquiry and found the Brothers
have no links with terrorism. But, GCC will not give up easily. They will
expect Jewish lobbies in the US also to work against the Brotherhood whose rise
will upset the Fatah-Hamas equilibrium in Palestine.
Meanwhile, West Asia is on a roller
coaster. The Al Aqsa mosque attacks could well lead to another Intefada.
Secretary of State, John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad
Zarif are reportedly inching towards “outlines” of a settlement adding to Saudi
anxieties.
In his latest statement, leader of the
Islamic State, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has directly asked his followers inside
Saudi Arabia to “draw your swords” and cut off the head of the “serpent”,
namely the Saudi leadership. And, not to spare Iran either. So it is all
building up to a crescendo.
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