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Saudia, Bahrain, UAE & Egypt cut diplomatic ties with Qatar

Is Turkey going to jump into the Qatar crisis?
ADAM GARRIE

Of all of the non-Arab countries which publicly proclaimed neutrality over the current Qatar crisis, Turkey’s stated neutrality is the most difficult to swallow. Even Iran whose alleged steps towards semi-normalisation (and even that’s a stretch) with Qatar is a stated proximate cause of the Saudi led dispute, has taken a more neutral position, criticising the act rather than the states who enacted the total shutting off of Qatar from its neighbours and much of the wider Arab world.

The Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu gave a somewhat bold statement on the issue in comparison to the more nuanced ones coming from Russia, Iran and the United States. He said that the “unity and togetherness” of the Gulf is as important to Turkey as its own unity, a unity which one could be forgiven for saying is more fragile than that of the Gulf has generally been.

He then stated,“Turkey, as a responsible actor in its region and as term president of the Organization of Islamic Conference, is ready to do its best for resolving this disagreement between friendly and brotherly countries as soon as possible”.

In this sense Turkey has volunteered, albeit subtly to act as a mediator in the dispute, though at this point it is doubtful that two Arab kingdoms would want to take Turkey up on such an offer. If the dispute is prolonged however, this could perhaps change.

One could even imagine the US ‘outsourcing’ such a responsibility to Turkey in spite of Donald Trump’s frosty relationship with Turkish President Erdogan. Russia and Iran have wisely stayed well above the fray in every respect of this particular issue as of course has China.

But Turkey’s preference for Qatar over Saudi Arabia is clear. It’s preference for Qatar over Egypt is likewise clear, but for subtly different reasons.

In both Libya and Syria Turkey and Qatar are backing many of the same jihadist terrorist factions. Indeed,Qatar’s modest investments into Turkey’s economy have expanded into funding some of the jihadist groups in Syria which are under the putative wing of Erdogan.

Qatar’s backing of the Muslim Brotherhood has been stressed as one of Saudi’s justifications for breaking off all connections with its small neighbour. However, Saudi’s disdain for the Brotherhood is less ideological than it is systematic and strategic.

Saudi sees the Brotherhood as better organised and older competition for influence in the theocratic political spectrum of the Sunni Arab world. Saudi as the Qatar row demonstrates, does not like any competition, in many ways Saudi hates competition more than it hates polar opposite political systems such as that of Iran. Of course the Saudis would deny this for the obvious reasons of wanting to save face. By contrast, Qatar has embraced the Brotherhood for the same reasons that Saudi shuns it. Qatar is happy to fund a group whose organisational and doctrinal structure needs no additional support from Qatar–they merely need Qatari money.

Turkey’s relationship with the Brotherhood at this point is the opposite of pragmatic. Erdogan’s political beliefs and instincts are very much in line with that of the Muslim Brotherhood. When Egypt was briefly ruled by the once again outlawed group, Turkish-Egyptian relations improved. Now that secular rule has been restored to Egypt, President Sisi will not forgive Erdogan any time soon, nor will he forgive the Qatari’s whose relationship with the Brotherhood reached a zenith during the rule of Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood President Morsi.

However much the pro-Qatari factions in Turkey want to see Egypt as an ‘ally’ of Saudi Arabia, the reality is that Egypt is rightly angry at Qatar and Turkey for their support of the hated Brotherhood regime, whereas Saudi dollars are plentiful and don’t come with this particular baggage of Qatari dollars, let alone the baggage of President Ergodan’s ideology or ego.

This didn’t stop the Turkish mainstream media paper Hurriyet from speaking of a ‘Saudi-Egyptian Axis’.

An opinion piece in the generally reasonable Al-Monitor speaks of Erdogan fearing that he could be the next Morsi or even more strangely the next Qatar.

First of all, Turkey is not part of the Arab sphere of influence much though Erdgoan often wants to be. In many ways Turkey is far more distant to Sunni Arab countries than Iran is with Shi’a movements, parties and countries in the Arab world.

Erdogan’s position is indeed far more precarious than his followers would care to admit but none of these reasons have to do with the Gulf. They have to do with Erdogan’s disastrous interventions in Syria and Iraq, the Kurdish issue that Erdogan’s involvement in Syria and Iraq has inflamed both domestically and internationally and this is all compounded by Turkey’s own experiences with Salafist blow-back from Turkey’s neighbours as well as disgruntled secular Kemalists who are hating Erdogan more by the day in spite of their increased marginalisation at the hands of Erdogan. This has only made them more angry in many cases.

Erdogan’s followers see the same forces that are ‘undermining’ Qatar as the kinds of forces loyal to exiled Turkish Islamist Fethullah Gülen who Erdogan still blames for the attempted coup in 2016. It’s a strange comparison but it is indeed playing on the minds of some in Erdgoan’s party.

The only similarities between these two disputes are academic. Saudi and Qatar have similar political systems and broadly a similar geo-political position. Much the same can be said about Erdogan’s relationship with Fethullah Gülen, a former ally turned supreme enemy. Saudi and Qatar are drawn into hatred because of their similarities rather than their differences and the same scenario rightly applies to Erdogan and Gülen.

But beyond this, Turkey has nothing directly to fear from the Qatar political conflicts…for now.

If Turkey gets more deeply involved and knowing Erdogan, if Turkey does, Ankara’s pro-Qatari stance will show and Erdogan will alienate Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and others perhaps permanently.

This is very much in Erdogan’s hands. If he truly remains neutral, his rule in Turkey will remain as safe is it otherwise would be and he could even quietly step up business with an isolated Qatar that could use Turkey as a still open door to the region and the wider world. If he instead cooks his own goose by stepping into the situation with bravado he could get totally isolated from the remaining parts of the Arab world that aren’t all ready sick and tired of him.

http://theduran.com/is-turkey-going-to-jump-into-the-qatar-crisis/
 
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listen arabs dont care about you. the ommat you talk of is nothing but a tool for arab imperialism

let me tell you one fact- pakistan always stood by the arabs during the arab israel conflict sent military help. when indo pak war broke out you know what happened no arab came to the ground to fight for them only diplomatic support nothing else. to this day they dont recognise israel but arab countries along with plo maintain great relations with its sworn enemy india. not that i care but ok LOL :omghaha:

its your wish if you still want to believe in ommat nonsense i'll leave that to you

It's not nonsense buddy. If you call yourself Muslim, then it is incumbent upon you to respect the concept.
 
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I understand the difference. However what I don't understand is you hiding the fact that you are of Bangladeshi origin. People seeing your flags will assume that you are an average American.

This has nothing to do with Iran. What makes you think that? What has the US to do with anything let alone Trump? Was Trump also behind somewhat similar (although less harsh actions) in 2013?

You are basically shouting about "puppets", "zionism" etc. forgetting that Qatar is the biggest puppet in the GCC (by far) and the biggest "Zionist" entity.

Firstly, no one is hiding anything. Secondly, I am an average American. What I believe you are referring to is that I'm not white American. Thirdly, what flags I fly are irrelevant to this discussion.

The substance and arguments still stand. You guys are getting played by the Israelis and to a lesser extent the Americans. Stop fighting with Iran and realize the real threat which lays to your west.

5 things you need to know about what’s going on with Qatar
ADAM GARRIE
It’s not every day that two states with similar societies and international alignments break into an open cold war, but this is what is happen between Qatar and Saudi Arabia.

Here’s what you need to know.

1. Black Gold Meets Cold War In The Desert
Qatar and Saudi Arabia are neighbours and the similarities do not end there. Both are heavily reliant on energy exports in order to fund their lavish domestic economies. Both practice similar forms of Salafist Islam and both countries have been the traditional enemies of secular Arab states, notably Syria. Both countries are sponsors of terrorism including al-Qaeda and ISIS at various times.

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Hillary Clinton email reveals she knew of Saudi & Qatar government funding for ISIL (ISIS) by August 2014 https://wikileaks.org/podesta-emails/emailid/55380#efmA_RBEL …

Although the states are arguing over their differences, it is their similarities that are the real root of the crisis.

With experts predicting that oil prices will never recover as non-OPEC members continue to produce more energy and as China becomes a pioneer in green energy production, Saudi Arabia is feeling the economic sting and is trying to isolate a regional energy exporter.

Oil prices rose after Saudi and others made the announcement that they were breaking off relations with Qatar. However, the bigger question is: will the prices go back down? Most experts say yes, something which will embolden the deeply un-creative Saudi regime to take even more aggressive measures, even against neighbours with similar ideologies.

Although Saudi Arabia and Qatar had a somewhat similar spat in 2014, the current issue is far bigger.

Saudi has managed to convince many more countries to join in the boycott and Saudi Arabia has moved to shut down state-owned Qatari media, notably Al Jazeera. Saudi has also shut the border to Qatar as well as Saudi waters. Flights from the state airlines of Saudi Arabia and its ally the UAE to Qatar have all stopped. Furthermore, Saudi is now demanding that Qatar change the name of its Imam Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab Mosque, named for the spiritual father of the Saudi ideology.

It really is as if the Saudis and the UAE are building a kind of invisible but deeply unambiguous Berlin Wall around Qatar.

2. Qatar Diversifies Its ‘Geo-political Portfolio’

Qatar has long been attempting to subtly and at times overtly shift its international alliances in order to differentiate itself from Saudi and carve out a unique niche as a ‘separate but equal’ despotic Gulf state.

Most notably, Qatar has made overtures towards Iran just as Saudi’s habitually anti-Iranian stance goes into overdrive. The proximate cause of the dispute are now deleted Tweets from Qatar’s state-run news agency wherein Qatar’s supreme ruler Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani spoke warmly about Iran and even praised the Lebanese Resistance Hezbollah, a Shi’a party that is an ally of Iran but one considered a terrorist group by Saudi Arabia and the US.

Although Qatar continues to insist that the Tweet was the product of a hacking hoax, the Saudis are not buying it.

Qatar is by no means pro-Iranian, but pragmatism has led Qatar to seek possible business opportunities, especially in respect of gas deals with the Islamic Republic. The idea that a fellow Gulf Cooperation Council member might have any positive relations with Iran goes against everything Saudi Arabia and the United States stands for.

3. What about Egypt? What do they have in common with Saudi Arabia?
The short answer is that apart from the kinds of Saudi business dealings that proliferate throughout the entire world with the exceptions of countries like Syria and Iran, Egypt has little practically to do with Saudi.

Egypt is a secular, multi-faith state that has recently been under attack from Salafist terrorist groups like ISIS which are supported by both Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

However, unlike Saudi, Qatar supports the illegal group Muslim Brotherhood which briefly ruled Egypt between 2012 and 2013 after Barack Obama’s United States abandoned its traditional ally, former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.

Now that secular rule has been restored, Egypt is particularly angry with Qatar for funding and supporting the Muslim Brotherhood.

That being said, most Egyptians have very negative views about both states as do most moderate Sunnis and virtually all Shi’a Muslims and Christians.

The real shame is that Egypt which was the undisputed leader of the Arab world under the leadership of President Nasser, is now simply following in Saudi’s bleak shadow.

4. Saudi Arabia Accused Qatar of Sponsoring Terrorism…YES THAT Saudi Arabia

Nobody said that the Saudi regime was honest, even though this time they’ve really gone for it. Saudi Arabia is by any estimation, the world’s largest state sponsor of terrorism. Qatar is also a state sponsor of much of the same kind of terrorism. Saudi Arabia is correct when it accuses Saudi Arabia of sponsoring terrorism, but this doesn’t mean that Saudi Arabia is suddenly on the side of the righteous. It means that Saudi Arabia is simply as hypocritical as it has always been.

In other words…pass the popcorn.

5. The Syrian Connection

It is widely known that both Saudi Arabia and Qatar are fighting on the same side in Syria, using their mutual terrorist proxies who receive funds and arms from both states. This includes groups like ISIS and al-Qaeda as well as other Salafist terrorist groups.

Secular Ba’athist Syria has no relations with either Qatar or Saudi Arabia and this is unlikely to change in the immediate future.

However, with Saudi and Qatar now at loggerheads, it could mean that terrorists will have to pick which country they are loyal to and in the process they may lose one of their two main cash cows.

Furthermore, with Syria set to win the war against Qatari and Saudi funded terrorism, Qatar’s plans to build a gas pipeline to Turkey, running largely through Syria, may never happen. This was one of the main reasons Qatar sought to overthrow the legitimate government of the Syrian Arab Republic. It might also be a reason why having more or less given up on the Syrian pipeline, Qatar is embarrassingly (for Qatar) turning to Iran, which as everyone knows is fighting Qatari terrorists is Syria along side Iran’s partners against terrorism, The Syrian Arab Republic and Russian Federation.

Russia and America have remained neutral on the dispute as has Pakistan, an ally of both Saudi and Qatar, which depends greatly on investment from both countries.

This dispute will not immediately change the war in Syria, but it could lead to some fracturing in the loyalties and funds of jihadists.
laugh-1.jpg

http://theduran.com/5-things-need-k...ail&utm_term=0_ddd5d38c0f-d31e6e6f93-85828245

Lol. Sisi is beyond pathetic. YouTube his meetings with Trump. Grab some popcorn and watch the butt kissing.
 
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8:23am - Qatar Airways suspends flights to UAE, Egypt, Bahrain
  • Qatar Airways has cancelled flights to Bahrain, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates from Tuesday until further notice, the airline said on its website, a day after it had suspended flights to Saudi Arabia.

    The airline said passengers holding a confirmed Qatar Airways ticket to any of the four countries between June 5 and July 6 are permitted to rebook their flights up to 30 days after their current departure date.

    Qatar Airways said its offices will continue to operate as normal in affected countries until further notice.
8:00am - Turkey's Erdogan holds talks on lowering tensions
  • Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan spoke by phone with the leaders of Qatar, Russia, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia on lowering tension, presidential sources said.

    "The importance of regional peace and stability was underlined in the talks, as well as the importance of focusing on the path of diplomacy and dialogue to lower the current tension," according to the sources.
6:30am - Dialogue is the way to solve disputes, Qatar's foreign minister says
  • "For us, the strategic choice of the state of Qatar is to solve any dispute through dialogue," Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman Al Thani tells Al Jazeera.

    "We are going through extremely difficult circumstances and challenges and there are wars in the Arab world and people killed whether due to terrorism and extremism or terror crimes committed by regimes against their peoples. And there is a crisis in Yemen, Syria and Libya, and these challenges must unite us. We are surprised that at such a time, a GCC country is being attacked by other GCC countries."
1:30am Tuesday - Qatari foreign minister discusses crisis with Al Jazeera
  • Qatar's Foreign Minister Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman Al Thani tells Al Jazeera in an interview he is unsure why the situation escalated the way it did.

    He said the emir of Kuwait was traveling to Saudi Arabia on Tuesday to assist in "containing the crisis". Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani will give a speech to the nation on Tuesday to address the situation.

    He added there's a big question mark over the future of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). "Regarding the reasons for this escalation, honestly, we don't know if there were real reasons for this crisis or whether it was based on things we're unaware of. If there were real reasons, it would have been put on the table for discussion during the GCC meeting, but none of that was mentioned. It wasn't mentioned either during the American-Islamic-Arab summit in Riyadh. There were no indications whatsoever," the foreign minister said.

    "There was an unprecedented escalation from the mass media of these countries insulting a brotherly nation, using the type of language that was never used before against the leadership. Qatar has not met this escalation with escalation. We've been trying to deal with this wisely. We haven't responded to them on the same level."
10:40pm - Kuwait calls for restraint
  • Kuwait's Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah has called Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani and "urged him for restraint and not to take any measure that could escalate" the situation in the Gulf, according to the state-run KUNA news agency.
8:30pm - Turkey is seeking to resolve Gulf spat
  • Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is "actively involved" in efforts to resolve the diplomatic spat between Qatar and its neighbours, according to Turkey's Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus.
8pm - US military has "no plans" for change
  • The US military's Central Command says it has "no plans to change our posture in Qatar" amid a Gulf diplomatic crisis. Major Adrian J T Rankine-Galloway said in a statement that US military aircraft continue to fly missions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria from Qatar's Al-Udeid air base.
7:30pm - Egypt airspace to close on Tuesday morning
  • Egypt's ministry of civil aviation has announced that the country's airspace will be closed to Qatari flights starting Tuesday 04:00GMT.
6:30pm - Israel praises anti-Qatar moves
  • Avigdor Lieberman, Israel's defence minister, has praised the measures against Qatar, saying "there is no doubt that this opens very many possibilities of cooperation in the struggle against terror".
6:25pm - Saudi shuts Al Jazeera office
  • Saudi Arabia has shut down Al Jazeera Media Network's local office, according to Saudi state media
5:40pm - No Qatari vessels allowed in Saudi ports
  • The Saudi Ports Authority has notified shipping agents not to receive vessels carrying Qatari flags or ships that are owned by Qatari companies or individuals.
5:10pm - Egypt suspends air and sea links
  • Egypt's foreign ministry said in a statement the country was suspending air and sea links to Qatar, citing national security.
4:40pm - Turkey expresses 'sorrow'
  • Turkey is ready to help however it can to bring the disputes to a manageable level, said Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu speaking at a joint press conference in Ankara.

  • Cavusoglu also said: "Turkey sees the unity and solitary among Gulf states as our own unity".
4pm - Iran's food 'can reach in 12 hours'
  • Food shipments sent from Iran can reach Qatar in 12 hours, said Reza Nourani, chairman of the union of exporters of agricultural products.
3:30pm - UAE port to turn away Qatar-bound vessels
  • UAE's Port of Fujairah says all vessels flying the flag of Qatar or destined for Qatar will not be allowed to call at the port.
3:30pm - Iran calls for dialogue
  • Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Ghasemi was quoted on the ministry's website as calling for a "clear and explicit dialogue" among the feuding nations. Iran says rising tensions among its Arab Gulf neighbours threaten the interests of everyone in the region.
3:15pm - Maldives cuts ties with Qatar
  • Decision made because of the Maldives "firm opposition to activities that encourage terrorism and extremism".
3:10pm - Egypt recalls ambassador
  • Egypt's foreign ministry says it has given the Qatari ambassador in Cairo 48 hours to leave the country and has ordered its own envoy in Doha to return home, also within two days.
2:50pm - Libya's Haftar cuts ties with Qatar
  • The faction led by Khalifa Haftar, one of three rival governments in Libya, announced it is cutting ties with Qatar.

  • Haftar's foreign minister accuses Qatar of "harbouring terrorism".
2pm - Saudi closes border with Qatar
  • Saudi Transport authority confirms immediate border closure with Qatar by land and by sea.
1:30pm - Saudi border line up
  • Reports of trucks being lined up across the border in Saudi Arabia unable to enter Qatar.
1:20pm - Updates from FIFA
  • Football's world governing body says it remains in "regular contact with Qatar".

  • FIFA issued a short statement saying it has spoken with "the Qatar 2022 Local Organizing Committee and the Supreme Committee for Delivery Legacy handling matters relating to the 2022 FIFA World Cup".

  • It said: "We have no further comments for the time being".
1:15pm - Air Arabia flights suspended from Tuesday
  • Air Arabia, a low-cost airline based in the United Arab Emirates, said it is suspending flights to Qatar along with other Emirati airlines over a growing diplomatic crisis.

  • Air Arabia says its flights will be suspended from Tuesday "until further notice".
EXPLAINED: How diplomatic rift affects air travel

12:10pm - Saudia flights suspended from Monday
  • Saudi Arabian Airlines says it is suspending flights to the Qatari capital, Doha.

  • The airline, also known as Saudia, posted on Twitter that it would be halting flights from Monday morning, without elaborating.
11:05am - FlyDubai flights cancelled from Tuesday
  • Dubai's budget carrier FlyDubai says it has canceled its flights to Qatar amid a diplomatic dispute between it and other Arab countries.

  • The carrier said on Monday that, starting Tuesday, all flights would be suspended. It offered no other details.

  • FlyDubai's decision follows that of Emirates and Etihad in canceling flights to Doha.
10:45am - Yemen cuts ties with Qatar
  • Yemen's internationally recognised government has cut relations with Qatar and says it supports the decision by the Saudi-led coalition to end Qatar's participation in the war on the Houthis in Yemen. Qatar has been part of the coalition since March 2015.
  • The government of President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi says it severed ties with Qatar in part over is support of extremist groups in Yemen "in contradiction with the goals announced by the countries supporting the legitimate government".
10:20am - Emirates flights cancelled from Tuesday
  • The Dubai-based airline Emirates says it is suspending flights to Qatar amid a growing diplomatic rift.

  • Emirates said on its website on Monday flights would be suspended until further notice starting Tuesday.
10am - US urges GCC unity
  • US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told reporters in Sydney: "It is important that the GCC remain a unified [front]".

  • Tillerson does not expect the rift "to have any significant impact, if any impact at all, on the unified fight against terrorism".

  • Qatar hosts the largest US military base in the Middle East.
9:55am - Qatar's official reaction
  • Qatar says there is "no legitimate justification" for four Arab nations to cut diplomatic ties.

  • Qatar also says the decision is a "violation of its sovereignty", vowing to its citizens it will not affect them.
READ: Qatar's reaction in full

8:35am - Etihad suspends flights from Tuesday
  • Abu Dhabi-based airline Etihad said it is suspending flights to Qatar from June 6 "until further notice".

  • Etihad said its last flights would leave early Tuesday morning.

  • Etihad gave no reason for the decision. It is the flag carrier of the United Arab Emirates.
6:10am - UAE, Egypt cut ties with Qatar
  • The United Arab Emirates and Egypt have cut diplomatic ties with Qatar.
  • Both the UAE and Egypt made the announcement on their state-run news agencies within minutes of each other.
6am - Saudi cuts ties with Qatar
  • Saudi Arabia says it is cutting diplomatic ties to Qatar and it has pulled all Qatari troops from the ongoing war in Yemen.

  • Saudi Arabia made the announcement via its state-run Saudi Press Agency early on Monday. It appeared to be timed in concert with an earlier announcement by Bahrain similarly cutting ties.

  • The dispute between Qatar and the Gulf's Arab countries escalated recently over a hack of Qatar's state-run news agency. It has spiraled since.
5:50am - Bahrain cuts ties with Qatar
  • Bahrain says it is cutting diplomatic ties to Qatar amid a deepening rift between Gulf Arab nations.

  • Bahrain's Foreign Affairs Ministry issued a statement early on Monday saying it would withdraw its diplomatic mission from the Qatari capital of Doha within 48 hours and that all Qatari diplomats should leave Bahrain within the same period.
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/06/qatar-diplomatic-crisis-latest-updates-170605105550769.html
 
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8:23am - Qatar Airways suspends flights to UAE, Egypt, Bahrain
  • Qatar Airways has cancelled flights to Bahrain, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates from Tuesday until further notice, the airline said on its website, a day after it had suspended flights to Saudi Arabia.

    The airline said passengers holding a confirmed Qatar Airways ticket to any of the four countries between June 5 and July 6 are permitted to rebook their flights up to 30 days after their current departure date.

    Qatar Airways said its offices will continue to operate as normal in affected countries until further notice.
8:00am - Turkey's Erdogan holds talks on lowering tensions
  • Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan spoke by phone with the leaders of Qatar, Russia, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia on lowering tension, presidential sources said.

    "The importance of regional peace and stability was underlined in the talks, as well as the importance of focusing on the path of diplomacy and dialogue to lower the current tension," according to the sources.
6:30am - Dialogue is the way to solve disputes, Qatar's foreign minister says
  • "For us, the strategic choice of the state of Qatar is to solve any dispute through dialogue," Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman Al Thani tells Al Jazeera.

    "We are going through extremely difficult circumstances and challenges and there are wars in the Arab world and people killed whether due to terrorism and extremism or terror crimes committed by regimes against their peoples. And there is a crisis in Yemen, Syria and Libya, and these challenges must unite us. We are surprised that at such a time, a GCC country is being attacked by other GCC countries."
1:30am Tuesday - Qatari foreign minister discusses crisis with Al Jazeera
  • Qatar's Foreign Minister Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman Al Thani tells Al Jazeera in an interview he is unsure why the situation escalated the way it did.

    He said the emir of Kuwait was traveling to Saudi Arabia on Tuesday to assist in "containing the crisis". Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani will give a speech to the nation on Tuesday to address the situation.

    He added there's a big question mark over the future of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). "Regarding the reasons for this escalation, honestly, we don't know if there were real reasons for this crisis or whether it was based on things we're unaware of. If there were real reasons, it would have been put on the table for discussion during the GCC meeting, but none of that was mentioned. It wasn't mentioned either during the American-Islamic-Arab summit in Riyadh. There were no indications whatsoever," the foreign minister said.

    "There was an unprecedented escalation from the mass media of these countries insulting a brotherly nation, using the type of language that was never used before against the leadership. Qatar has not met this escalation with escalation. We've been trying to deal with this wisely. We haven't responded to them on the same level."
10:40pm - Kuwait calls for restraint
  • Kuwait's Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah has called Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani and "urged him for restraint and not to take any measure that could escalate" the situation in the Gulf, according to the state-run KUNA news agency.
8:30pm - Turkey is seeking to resolve Gulf spat
  • Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is "actively involved" in efforts to resolve the diplomatic spat between Qatar and its neighbours, according to Turkey's Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus.
8pm - US military has "no plans" for change
  • The US military's Central Command says it has "no plans to change our posture in Qatar" amid a Gulf diplomatic crisis. Major Adrian J T Rankine-Galloway said in a statement that US military aircraft continue to fly missions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria from Qatar's Al-Udeid air base.
7:30pm - Egypt airspace to close on Tuesday morning
  • Egypt's ministry of civil aviation has announced that the country's airspace will be closed to Qatari flights starting Tuesday 04:00GMT.
6:30pm - Israel praises anti-Qatar moves
  • Avigdor Lieberman, Israel's defence minister, has praised the measures against Qatar, saying "there is no doubt that this opens very many possibilities of cooperation in the struggle against terror".
6:25pm - Saudi shuts Al Jazeera office
  • Saudi Arabia has shut down Al Jazeera Media Network's local office, according to Saudi state media
5:40pm - No Qatari vessels allowed in Saudi ports
  • The Saudi Ports Authority has notified shipping agents not to receive vessels carrying Qatari flags or ships that are owned by Qatari companies or individuals.
5:10pm - Egypt suspends air and sea links
  • Egypt's foreign ministry said in a statement the country was suspending air and sea links to Qatar, citing national security.
4:40pm - Turkey expresses 'sorrow'
  • Turkey is ready to help however it can to bring the disputes to a manageable level, said Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu speaking at a joint press conference in Ankara.

  • Cavusoglu also said: "Turkey sees the unity and solitary among Gulf states as our own unity".
4pm - Iran's food 'can reach in 12 hours'
  • Food shipments sent from Iran can reach Qatar in 12 hours, said Reza Nourani, chairman of the union of exporters of agricultural products.
3:30pm - UAE port to turn away Qatar-bound vessels
  • UAE's Port of Fujairah says all vessels flying the flag of Qatar or destined for Qatar will not be allowed to call at the port.
3:30pm - Iran calls for dialogue
  • Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Ghasemi was quoted on the ministry's website as calling for a "clear and explicit dialogue" among the feuding nations. Iran says rising tensions among its Arab Gulf neighbours threaten the interests of everyone in the region.
3:15pm - Maldives cuts ties with Qatar
  • Decision made because of the Maldives "firm opposition to activities that encourage terrorism and extremism".
3:10pm - Egypt recalls ambassador
  • Egypt's foreign ministry says it has given the Qatari ambassador in Cairo 48 hours to leave the country and has ordered its own envoy in Doha to return home, also within two days.
2:50pm - Libya's Haftar cuts ties with Qatar
  • The faction led by Khalifa Haftar, one of three rival governments in Libya, announced it is cutting ties with Qatar.

  • Haftar's foreign minister accuses Qatar of "harbouring terrorism".
2pm - Saudi closes border with Qatar
  • Saudi Transport authority confirms immediate border closure with Qatar by land and by sea.
1:30pm - Saudi border line up
  • Reports of trucks being lined up across the border in Saudi Arabia unable to enter Qatar.
1:20pm - Updates from FIFA
  • Football's world governing body says it remains in "regular contact with Qatar".

  • FIFA issued a short statement saying it has spoken with "the Qatar 2022 Local Organizing Committee and the Supreme Committee for Delivery Legacy handling matters relating to the 2022 FIFA World Cup".

  • It said: "We have no further comments for the time being".
1:15pm - Air Arabia flights suspended from Tuesday
  • Air Arabia, a low-cost airline based in the United Arab Emirates, said it is suspending flights to Qatar along with other Emirati airlines over a growing diplomatic crisis.

  • Air Arabia says its flights will be suspended from Tuesday "until further notice".
EXPLAINED: How diplomatic rift affects air travel

12:10pm - Saudia flights suspended from Monday
  • Saudi Arabian Airlines says it is suspending flights to the Qatari capital, Doha.

  • The airline, also known as Saudia, posted on Twitter that it would be halting flights from Monday morning, without elaborating.
11:05am - FlyDubai flights cancelled from Tuesday
  • Dubai's budget carrier FlyDubai says it has canceled its flights to Qatar amid a diplomatic dispute between it and other Arab countries.

  • The carrier said on Monday that, starting Tuesday, all flights would be suspended. It offered no other details.

  • FlyDubai's decision follows that of Emirates and Etihad in canceling flights to Doha.
10:45am - Yemen cuts ties with Qatar
  • Yemen's internationally recognised government has cut relations with Qatar and says it supports the decision by the Saudi-led coalition to end Qatar's participation in the war on the Houthis in Yemen. Qatar has been part of the coalition since March 2015.
  • The government of President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi says it severed ties with Qatar in part over is support of extremist groups in Yemen "in contradiction with the goals announced by the countries supporting the legitimate government".
10:20am - Emirates flights cancelled from Tuesday
  • The Dubai-based airline Emirates says it is suspending flights to Qatar amid a growing diplomatic rift.

  • Emirates said on its website on Monday flights would be suspended until further notice starting Tuesday.
10am - US urges GCC unity
  • US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told reporters in Sydney: "It is important that the GCC remain a unified [front]".

  • Tillerson does not expect the rift "to have any significant impact, if any impact at all, on the unified fight against terrorism".

  • Qatar hosts the largest US military base in the Middle East.
9:55am - Qatar's official reaction
  • Qatar says there is "no legitimate justification" for four Arab nations to cut diplomatic ties.

  • Qatar also says the decision is a "violation of its sovereignty", vowing to its citizens it will not affect them.
READ: Qatar's reaction in full

8:35am - Etihad suspends flights from Tuesday
  • Abu Dhabi-based airline Etihad said it is suspending flights to Qatar from June 6 "until further notice".

  • Etihad said its last flights would leave early Tuesday morning.

  • Etihad gave no reason for the decision. It is the flag carrier of the United Arab Emirates.
6:10am - UAE, Egypt cut ties with Qatar
  • The United Arab Emirates and Egypt have cut diplomatic ties with Qatar.
  • Both the UAE and Egypt made the announcement on their state-run news agencies within minutes of each other.
6am - Saudi cuts ties with Qatar
  • Saudi Arabia says it is cutting diplomatic ties to Qatar and it has pulled all Qatari troops from the ongoing war in Yemen.

  • Saudi Arabia made the announcement via its state-run Saudi Press Agency early on Monday. It appeared to be timed in concert with an earlier announcement by Bahrain similarly cutting ties.

  • The dispute between Qatar and the Gulf's Arab countries escalated recently over a hack of Qatar's state-run news agency. It has spiraled since.
5:50am - Bahrain cuts ties with Qatar
  • Bahrain says it is cutting diplomatic ties to Qatar amid a deepening rift between Gulf Arab nations.

  • Bahrain's Foreign Affairs Ministry issued a statement early on Monday saying it would withdraw its diplomatic mission from the Qatari capital of Doha within 48 hours and that all Qatari diplomats should leave Bahrain within the same period.
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/06/qatar-diplomatic-crisis-latest-updates-170605105550769.html

Oh sweet baby jeebus. When Avigdor Lieberman supports this anti-Qatar non sense you know who is in the right.
 
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Iraq is already recovering by large. Good signs in Libya lately as well. Syria is another story and you are blaming the wrong actors here.
No one can stop people from dreaming. Do you think Iraq and Libya exist any more? Lets accept the fact that ME was created after WWI to achieve vested interest of superpowers of the time, it is the time to reshape to suit interests of superpowers of today. Becoming an ostrich would not take away clear and eminent danger. Good luck.
 
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KARMA lol hehehe
see it clearly shows you cannot trust gulf countries all are same and crazy
now they will destroy Qatar for good if this continues
soon will run out of food and the ppl will push for change of government might end up like libya iraq

funny part even maldives join the group against qatar hahahha so funny

sadly who will suffer aside from the business the normal people of the daily life will suffer a lot

qatar is terrorist then why the other GCC dont attack qatar . qatar need some democracy

well this is how weak we are , iran and turkey is right all should sit down and talk
 
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No one can stop people from dreaming. Do you think Iraq and Libya exist any more? Lets accept the fact that ME was created after WWI to achieve vested interest of superpowers of the time, it is the time to reshape to suit interests of superpowers of today. Becoming an ostrich would not take away clear and eminent danger. Good luck.

Correct again. This all will not end well for the muslims unless we first recognize what is happening. And I mean this on the Geo strategic national government level.
 
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vigdor Lieberman, Israel's defence minister, has praised the measures against Qatar, saying "there is no doubt that this opens very many possibilities of cooperation in the struggle against terror".
When the Proto fascist praises your actions, it should be pretty clear to you that you are on the wrong side of everything.


  • Food shipments sent from Iran can reach Qatar in 12 hours, said Reza Nourani, chairman of the union of exporters of agricultural products.

A move that will surely push Qatar closer to Iran.

Decision made because of the Maldives "firm opposition to activities that encourage terrorism and extremism".

I didnt knew you had just cut off your ties with Saudi Arabia aka the terror central.


  • The faction led by Khalifa Haftar, one of three rival governments in Libya, announced it is cutting ties with Qatar.
  • Haftar's foreign minister accuses Qatar of "harbouring terrorism".

Well atleast we now know who is supporting these terrorists in Libya.
 
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Iran should be careful about this mess we shouldn't get played .
First of all I am sure this happened with Trump's full approval. Second , Nothing to be happy about because i think it won't last long .
I am sure US and Saudi are waiting for Iran to support Qatar openly . Then we get played .
After all they are all arabs . We should stay neutral because the people of both sides , don't want us to meddle in their affairs . Meddling or openly supporting one side can change so many things against us and the side we support .
If any side officially asks for food products , it's ok because that's just business but nothing more .Even If one side asks for our airspace ( for commercial flights ) , we should make sure we allowed both sides to use our airspace .
This is just a fight between arab brothers ,Something common in their culture .One thing we should not forget is that these fights won't last long , what lasts is their brotherhood .
So i think we should't play their game .I think Active neutrality is the best countermeasure .
 
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It's not nonsense buddy. If you call yourself Muslim, then it is incumbent upon you to respect the concept.
again you are bringing religion. if you must know then no, i dont follow that religion anymore i left it. arabs are not your brothers neither do they consider one

our real friends in the middle east were the israelis who helped us during the war and recognized our country. none of the arab countries came to help us none of them recognized our country and you call them your brothers. you are blinded by hatred towards people who have never harmed you simply because of their religion.i am not a religious person but if God does exist then he stand by the israelis which is why the're still there

how could you expect anyone to believe in ommat nonsense after what happened forty six years back. curse their symbols curse their ideology muslim brotherhood my foot
 
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I think it is time for Pakistan, China, Turkey, Russia and all other peace loving nations to start a concerted effort to descalate the sitaution in the middle east. GCC countries are all rich and prosperous but their jingoism can undo years of development in a very short time and leave the region unstable for decades to come and also inundating the world economy in an uprecedented recession. Only a few countries will benefit from this situation namely Trump's USA and Israel.
Yes, blame US and Israel for everything. We (the Muslims) are all very peaceful in our engagements with each other. We don't know how to fight and/or never experience humanly emotions such as anger and disagreements. This is wholesale Zionist conspiracy; they have invaded our souls and turned us into puppets of their will.

Russia is a peace-loving state you know; it is supporting a genocidal regime in Syria and is also working to fracture Ukraine. Georgia was not enough a few years back.

Turkey is a peace-loving state you know; its operations against PKK are legitimate but I am not sure how operations against YPG in Syria helps the situation. YPG and PKK are two different groups with common views in some matters but YPG has no role in separatist movement inside Turkey. More importantly, YPG is important for routing ISIS from Syria.

China is a peace-loving state you know; it has disputes with 7 states (only) namely Malaysia,, India, Indonesia, Vietnam, Japan, South Korea, Philippines and Taiwan. I have nothing against China but this doesn't means that I will stop ignoring the reality.

Can we refrain from blaming US and Israel for everything or shall we continue to keep our faces in the sand?

US doesn't benefits from the developing situation one bit because it has investments in Saudi Arabia and Qatar. If anything, US would be the most effective mediator in this crises.
 
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again you are bringing religion. if you must know then no, i dont follow that religion anymore i left it. arabs are not your brothers neither do they consider you their brother

our real friends in the middle east were the israelis who helped us during the war and recognized our country. none of the arab countries came to help us none of them recognized our country you call them your brothers. you are blinded by hatred towards people who have never harmed you simply because of their religion.i am not a religious person but if God does exist then he stand by the israelis which is why the're still there

how could you expect anyone to believe in ommat nonsense after what happened forty six years back. curse their symbols curse their ideology muslim brotherhood my foot

I understand your frustration. About many things. However, all I can say is good luck on your spiritual journey. And may you find peace.
 
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