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

the Ex FM and PM of Qatar declared that his country received the American troops to conduct airstrikes against Iraq and other Muslim countries after Saudi Arabia kicked them out, but some naive PDFers still think that Qatar is playing a good role in the Muslim world with its current policies.

I am not a fan of Qatar they banned Pakistanis and are backing the pm in Pakistan who is under criminal investigation for international support but i think Saudia is a bit extreme with the blockade thing
 
Turkish Deputy Prime Minister: Turkey's base in Qatar is not one-sided for Qatar, but its main objective is to increase the defense capability of the entire Gulf states
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Turkish Foreign Minister heads to Kuwait and Saudi Arabia to discuss the Gulf crisis
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Elysee: Macron will meet separately Emir of Qatar and Crown Prince of the UAE in Paris
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US delegation arrives in Cairo to discuss anti-terrorism cooperation: A high-level US delegation arrived in Cairo on Wednesday evening for a short visit to Egypt, during which it will discuss boosting cooperation between Egypt and the United States, especially in the face of terrorist organizations.
 
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Saudi arab, its ruler and its minion UAE are in deep trouble.
1) US senate approved selling F15 aircraft to Qatar. That means joint saudi and israeli lobby failed to block that.
2) US sent warship stating they will hold joint naval exercise with Qatar.
3) US secretary of state announced declaring "brotherhood" as terrorist organization is not possible.

As I was saying US left saudi arab in the middle of the road with utter loss of face in front of arabs and world. Even saudi funded terrorists will think differently about house of saud.
The real game is being set up for the KSA, which is basically a tribal country. Now the powerful tribes will be after one another - one's gain is other's loss!!!! For some folks, the period of Jehiliye never ended!!!

Saudi arab, its ruler and its minion UAE are in deep trouble.
1) US senate approved selling F15 aircraft to Qatar. That means joint saudi and israeli lobby failed to block that.
2) US sent warship stating they will hold joint naval exercise with Qatar.
3) US secretary of state announced declaring "brotherhood" as terrorist organization is not possible.

As I was saying US left saudi arab in the middle of the road with utter loss of face in front of arabs and world. Even saudi funded terrorists will think differently about house of saud.
The real game is being set up for the KSA, which is basically a tribal country. Now the powerful tribes will be after one another - one's gain is other's loss!!!! For some folks, the period of Jehiliye never ended!!!
 
URGENT
Official source: The Kingdom can not allow Turkey to establish military bases on its territory.
Pointing out that the Kingdom does not need this and that its armed forces and military capabilities are at the best level, and have large contributions abroad..Including the Incirlik base in Turkey to combat terrorism and to protect security and stability in the region.

http://www.spa.gov.sa/viewstory.php?lang=ar&newsid=1640832
 
URGENT
Official source: The Kingdom can not allow Turkey to establish military bases on its territory.
Pointing out that the Kingdom does not need this and that its armed forces and military capabilities are at the best level, and have large contributions abroad..Including the Incirlik base in Turkey to combat terrorism and to protect security and stability in the region.

http://www.spa.gov.sa/viewstory.php?lang=ar&newsid=1640832

They had plans to establish a Turkish base in Saudi Arabia?!
 
"Our support for Qatar is not a substitute for our relations with other countries, and we are determined to further develop and strengthen our relations in all fields with all the Gulf states, particularly Saudi Arabia," Erdogan said in a speech at a meeting of the Turkish Exporters Council in Istanbul.

"We have very strong relations and multiple dimensions with all the Gulf countries, and with Saudi Arabia in the first place," Erdogan said.

They had plans to establish a Turkish base in Saudi Arabia?!
They have asked Saudi Arabia, about 3 months ago, if it will allow a Turkish base there..

See post #653 in the following thread:
https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/turk...-deployment-in-qatar-officials.500358/page-44

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There were accusations that the UAE supported the coup in Turkey which contradict this:

The Turkish ambassador to the UAE thanks the UAE for its rejection of the coup

 
Qatar, a wealthy country, is in trouble now.... its wealth is now at risk... one other Iraq in shape of Qatar is being made by the powers.... it is totally a war of personal gains.... one country attacks the other just looting its the wealth and later disappeared... leave the country in dilapidated situation....
 
So, Erdogan made the same offer to Saudi Arabia to show that Ankara doesn't pursue an anti-Saudi agenda.
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/...offer-build-base-kingdom-170617130342162.html

After reading pro-AKP newspapers in Turkey, it is clear that the gov't does not feel comfortable with the current situation. On the one hand they genuinely don't want a confrontation with Riyadh on the other hand
they are not going to let down Qatar.

Gulf needs Saudi Arabia's leadership, says Ankara
https://www.dailysabah.com/diplomacy/2017/06/15/gulf-needs-saudi-arabias-leadership-says-ankara
 
They had plans to establish a Turkish base in Saudi Arabia?!
You didn't know?

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Happy, Salmon? :-)

[story continues]

In Egypt, where Qatar and Turkey have supported the now-outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, locals say the military alliance appears to be a power play in the region.

The Egyptian government regularly becomes angry over Qatar's support of the Muslim Brotherhood and has banned that nation’s television network, Al-Jazeera. On Saturday, an Egyptian court recommended the death penalty for six people, including two Al-Jazeera journalists, charged with leaking state secrets to Qatar.

Qatar may increase its strength through this alliance, according to Mohamed Salah, a 34-year-old international trade researcher, as he walked home from work Wednesday; but, Egypt will remain more powerful, he said.


Mohamed Salah, a international trade researcher in Egypt says he believes the new Turkish military base in Qatar is intended to grow the two nation's regional power, Cairo, May 5, 2016. (VOA/Hamada Elrasam)

“It’s not a direct threat,” he said. “I believe that Egypt still has the upper hand in the Gulf region by its relationship with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.”

Isolation

When the Arab Spring uprisings began, Turkey and Qatar supported Muslim Brotherhood factions across the region, angering many Arab governments as the two nations worked to increase their influence. Qatar, a rich but tiny nation of roughly 2 million people, lost some of its credibility among Gulf Cooperation Council members, including regional powerhouse Saudi Arabia.

“Qatar’s lowest point in GCC relations came when Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Bahrain withdrew their ambassadors and threatened to close Qatar’s border for the alleged interference in GCC internal affairs,” writes Chris Solomon of Global Risks Insight, referring to a 2014 diplomatic dispute.

More recently, however, Qatar and Saudi Arabia have stood together in withdrawing ambassadors from Iran after the Saudi embassy in Tehran was attacked in retaliation for the execution of a Shi’ite cleric in the Kingdom.

Turkey has also found itself becoming more isolated internationally in recent years for other reasons. Turkey angered Russia by shooting down a Russian plane late last year, and its handling of Islamic State upset the United States. Turkey also is wrangling with Europe over free expression issues and is without active diplomatic relations in several Middle East countries.

Goals

Besides avoiding hardships that come with relative international isolation, Turkey and Qatar have other reasons for strengthening their military alliance, according to analysts.

Turkey, with nearly 75 million people and one of the region’s strongest military forces, stands to gain not only influence, but money as it breaks into the Gulf’s “lucrative defense market,” said analyst Cafiero.

“At this juncture,” he said, “Officials in Ankara view Qatar as Turkey’s most trusted Arab ally.”

“A shared political vision regarding the Middle East has helped bring the Turks and Qataris even closer,” Olivier Decottignies and Soner Cagaptay of The Washington Institute wrote in a January policy analysis piece.

Additionally, the move is part of a larger, long-term strategy, adds Cafiero. Qatari alliances are often with competing powers in order to play them off each other politically. The base, therefore, “further diversifies Doha’s web of defense partners and provides more states with higher stakes in a stable and prosperous Qatar.”

Cairo’s relationship with Doha and Ankara

And while people in Egypt do not necessarily see the move as aggressive, there is some worry that this strengthening alliance will further worsen relations.


Haj Mohy in Cairo, Egypt, says with his country's distrust of both Qatar and Turkey he worries the new base could increase the rivalry, Cairo, May 5, 2016. (VOA/Hamada Elrasam)

“The union of those two countries together and the fact that their relationship with Egypt is not good,” said Haj Mohy, a 52-year-old shopkeeper as he takes delivery calls while listening to Koran in a Cairo suburb. “Maybe there will be danger.”

Then again, he added, with all of the volatility in the region, it is hard to say what one new base could bring.

“There are American bases in the Gulf and there are Russian bases in the Gulf,” he said. “Is the Turkish base less or more dangerous?”

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KSA-US relations for instance are not like they once were and are not going to be that again. We are moving away from them and pursuing a much more independent policy and building closer ties to other partners.
June-08-17-Trump-Saudi-Arabia-Qatar-and-Terrorism-800x566.png
 
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Never knew Turkey had ambitions over the Arabian peninsula. Middle East, East Africa and now the Gulf?

What's their agenda?
 
Never knew Turkey had ambitions over the Arabian peninsula. Middle East, East Africa and now the Gulf?

What's their agenda?
Turkey has invested in somalia to help the war-torn country stabilize and is greatly welcomed by the somali people.the most popular name for somali boys is erdogan and istanbul respectively.
 
Turkey has invested in somalia to help the war-torn country stabilize and is greatly welcomed by the somali people.the most popular name for somali boys is erdogan and istanbul respectively.

Are you really a Somalian or just a big fanboy of Turkey? Are you joking? So Erdogan and Istanbul (WTF?) are more popular names than traditional Islamic/Somali names?

The real game is being set up for the KSA, which is basically a tribal country. Now the powerful tribes will be after one another - one's gain is other's loss!!!! For some folks, the period of Jehiliye never ended!!!


The real game is being set up for the KSA, which is basically a tribal country. Now the powerful tribes will be after one another - one's gain is other's loss!!!! For some folks, the period of Jehiliye never ended!!!

Do you even know what "tribal" means in an Arab context and that of KSA? Or do you think that "tribal" is comparable to what you see in Sub-Saharan Africa or the caste systems of South Asia?

Tribes and clans in KSA and the Arab world are basically large extended families who operate like small private firms or interest groups, often tied to specific areas in country x or y. Those tribes are actually helping keep the country and people united and intertwined and form a part of the civil society. Tribal Sheikhs help arbitrate land disputes in the rural areas and help keep law and order in rural societies far away from the central areas of power by helping manage day-to-day obligations and giving the state a helping hand.

It's basically comparable to a class composing people of all social layers within the larger society.

http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/4198/tribalism-in-the-arabian-peninsula_it-is-a-family-

I would not call it a nobility but something alike and with much more members and composing many more social layers in the society. In fact every layer.

For most people nowadays it only matters in the area of marriage or for people who are interested in genealogy or history of their family. Or when tribal gatherings occur where head of clans discuss matters of importance, extended family members met or when traditional displays (poetry, feasts) occur. Remember that KSA is the most urbanized country in the Muslim world of its size.

Numerous various tribes, clans etc. ruling their own cities, regions, towns, villages and fighting with allies against enemies (tribal wars on behalf of sovereign entities be they small kingdoms, emirates, sheikdoms, sultanates, imamates, tribal sheikdoms etc.) has ended a long ago. Similar to how feudalism has ended in Europe but what is left now is the nobility and aristocracy who tend to intermarry and meet during gatherings etc. Sounds familiar ah?

Lastly ancient Arab clans, tribes, families etc. are based across borders all over the Arab world. For instance some of the largest tribes, clans and families in KSA are lead by Sheikhs (Head of families based on seniority and ruling lines) who are based in Iraq next door for instance and the Sheikh there is the ceremonial head of the tribe/clan/family despite many or sometimes most of the members of the tribe/clan/family living in other countries. Sometimes from Morocco to Oman.

Non-Arabs will never understand this dynamic and will have all kind of strange nonsense perceptions when they hear the word tribe, clan or large extended family in an Arab context or just in general. This is not really our problem. You think this is a weakness for KSA but in fact this is a strength more than anything.

@Full Moon @Arabi @Saudi Typhoon

Tribalism in the Arabian Peninsula: It Is a Family Affair

Feb 01 2012 by Sultan Al-Qassemi

2010AlQaqaTVshow.png

[Image from the 2010 Al Qa'qa', a TV show funded by Qatar. Image from unknown source.]​

Across the Arabian Peninsula and stretching well into North Africa and Sudan, there is a common bond, perhaps only behind religion and language in importance, that binds Arabic language speakers together. Museums across the Gulf proudly display lineage maps illustrating the family trees of ruling members, linking them through lines and photos from bygone centuries up to the current leader. Major financial institutions in Dubai and Bahrain display in their offices large-scale maps detailing prominent ruling family members of the Gulf States, including their marital, government, and business affiliations. Tribalism in modern day Arabia is alive and well. In this article, I highlight recent developments to illustrate how those in power in the Gulf and the Arabian Peninsula use tribalism, and how, sometimes, it is used against them.

Tribalism Will Be Televised

The centuries-old phenomenon of tribal diplomacy continues to manifest itself in the modern Arab world of satellite televisions as well as in defining politics amongst neighboring Gulf States. In the summer of 2010, for instance, Elaph, a popular Saudi-owned news portal, carried a story on what it deemed were the Emir of Qatar Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani's attempts to “restore glory to his ancestor.” This ancestor, Al-Qa'qa' ibn ‘Amr al-Tamimi, is a legendary Arab warrior who helped spread Islam to the Levant. He was portrayed heroically in a thirty-two episode Ramadan soap opera. The Emir, whose youngest son is also named al-Qa’qa’, allegedly supported the major television production to the tune of eight million dollars. Elaph quoted Saudi analyst Abdullah al-Shammari, who claimed that there are ulterior motives behind the financing of this television show. “We all know that the Bani Tamim tribe doesn’t have a leader, unlike the (tribes of) Shammar, ‘Anaza, and others. That is why al-Thani [the Emir of Qatar] is seeking its leadership, especially because it is larger and more spread out than others.” The logic goes that since the Bani Tamim, who come from Najd in central Saudi Arabia and whose descendants include the al-Thanis of Qatar, do not have a leader, the mantle is up for grabs.

There were other instances when tribal politics found its way onto the small screen. Following complaints from two influential Saudi tribes in September 2008, a 2.5 million-dollar soap opera on the al-Awaji tribal conflicts of 1750 and 1830—produced by Abu Dhabi television—was pulled off the air. The National also reported that just a week earlier another soap opera called Finjan al-Dam, whose plot revolved around nineteenth-century tribal conflicts, was due to be broadcast on Saudi-owned Middle East Broadcasting Corporation (MBC) but was abruptly cancelled.

On the other hand, the emirate of Abu Dhabi endeared itself to millions in the Arabian Peninsula after it launched the "Poet of Millions" competition that rewarded individuals for mastering Bedouin Nabati poetry. The popular television show preserved tribal dialects and vocabulary in a manner deemed respectful of their traditions and culture, although a number of female participants were subject to tribal pressures and even death threats.

The 'Anaza Connection

Today, the ruling dynasties of Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Kuwait all belong to the ‘Anazas of central Arabia. The ‘Anaza tribe is amongst the largest and most ancient Arabian tribes. Its members can be traced back to Prophet Mohammed’s companions and its descendants can be found across the Arabian Peninsula, as well as in non-Arab Iran and Turkey. In 1891, the ruling Al Rashid tribe of Hai’l exiled the family of Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud, the founder of modern Saudi Arabia, to his tribal ‘Anaza cousins in Kuwait. Abdul Aziz, only fifteen years old at the time, remained there for eleven years before leading forces back into Riyadh and capturing it from the al-Rashid family in a bloody battle. Almost exactly a century later, as Saddam Hussein’s forces invaded Kuwait, al-Sauds returned the favor by offering sanctuary to the Kuwaiti ruling family when they were forced into exile during the attendant Iraqi occupation. Similarly, when the rule of the al-Khalifa regime of Bahrain was in jeopardy in the spring of 2011, Saudi Arabia sent in troops—along with the United Arab Emirates (UAE)—to the island kingdom as part of the Peninsula Shield Forces. Three months later, one of the Bahraini king’s sons, Sheikh Khalid Bin Hamad, got engaged to the daughter of the Saudi King Abdullah. Another of his sons, Sheikh Nasser, a full brother of Sheikh Khalid from a Saudi mother, had already married the daughter of the ruler of Dubai and United Arab Emirates' Prime Minister in 2009. The vast reach of the ‘Anaza tribe across the Arab world cannot be overestimated. Toward the end of 2010, former Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi claimed at an Arab summit that he also belonged to the 'Anaza tribebut that his ancestors had left Arabia because of a dispute. If true, it would mean that he was a distant relative of several ruling Gulf families.

Recent incidents illustrate the delicate manner with which tribal relations need to be handled, swiftly and with care. In 2003, for example, Talal Al Rashid of the Shammar tribe, a well-known poet and the scion of the al-Rashid family—the historic rivals of al-Sauds—was killed in an ambush in Algeria. The late Saudi Crown Prince Sultan Bin Abdul Aziz immediately dispatched a private plane to fly Talal’s body back to Saudi Arabia as a sign of respect and perhaps even to quell various conspiracy theories that were circulating online. In another instance, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) Prime Minister’s brother in law, King Abdullah of Jordan—whose family had ruled Ottoman Hejaz and later the short-lived Kingdoms of Iraq and Syria—ran afoul of tribes in his own country last year. In an uncharacteristically public manner, an open letter signed by thirty-six representatives of the main Bedouin tribes accused Queen Rania of corruption, prompting a strong denial by the monarchy.

In addition to strengthening bonds, tribal marriages often go hand in hand with financial developments. It is common to find Gulf ruling family members marrying into wealthy merchant families in a marriage that preserves both the peace and the wealth. These marriages also extend beyond national borders, as the above cases in Bahrain illustrate. In the mid-1960s, the former ruler of Qatar, Sheikh Ahmed bin Ali Al Thani (deposed by his cousin, who was in turn deposed by his son, the current Emir), married the daughter of the former ruler of Dubai and sister of the current ruler and Emirati Prime Minister. Despite regional reservations, an interstate gulf monetary union called the Dubai-Qatar Riyal came into place on 21 March 1966 and lasted until well after the formation of the Emirates in 1971. Familial ties and economic collaboration are deeply intertwined: one is often prompted by the other. Today in the Gulf, the marriage phenomenon between inter-state ruling families continues with the younger generation, bringing with it economic security as well as strengthening political ties between the families.

UAE: Tribalism Squared

The Emirates are an ecosystem of tribal networks and alliances, all of their own kind. The ruling families of both Abu Dhabi and Dubai belong to the House of Falahi and House of Falasi respectively, both being branches of the Bani Yas tribe of southern Arabia. The families split in 1833 when Sheikh Maktoum bin Butti Al Falasi led 3,600 individuals from Abu Dhabi Island on a 120-kilometer trek up the Gulf coast to the southern borders of the emirate of Sharjah (where I am from). The ruling families of Sharjah and that of the northernmost emirate of Ras Al Khaimah, who are direct cousins, are even more closely connected. A network of close family intermarriages also connects all members of the Emirates' ruling families without exception. Either the ruler himself, the crown prince, or the deputy ruler of a specific emirate has immediate family members who hail from one of the other ruling families. In the continuous absence of credible federal institutions, this inter-marriage network has been overlooked as an element that has no doubt contributed to the survival of the UAE as a federation over the past four decades.

Emirati tribalism was evinced in recent managed parliamentary elections that were so skewed in favor of familial ties that it was not uncommon to read of voters who proudly pronounced that they only voted for family members and no one else. In fact, in Abu Dhabi, the largest of the seven emirates, members from the al-Ameri tribe won three out of the four available parliamentary seats. This may have been a result of the peculiar strategy that the UAE authorities followed, in which it hand-picked twelve percent of the population to elect half of the forty members of the Federal National Council. Such skewed results may disenfranchise those who seek to further empower the national population in the UAE, a nascent country that is in need of stronger federal institutions, to demand a greater say in government affairs. In Saudi Arabia’s September 2011 municipal elections, a similar pattern emerged in which tribal candidates formed alliances with those from other districts. This phenomenon ensures that candidates who do not come from a tribal affiliation, no matter how qualified or competent, do not stand a fair chance in running for elected office.

As the UAE was trying five reform activists for insulting the country's leaders, thousands of citizens packed tents traditionally set up for weddings or funerals to listen to their tribal leaders pledge allegiance to the Emirati president. The National reported that tribal members “handed pins, the national flag and medallions bearing pictures of Sheikh Khalifa, President of the UAE.” One woman who spoke to the paper said, “We live here in the UAE as tribes and our leader is a sheikh. Having free elections and more elected Emiratis won't make a difference in our daily lives.” Similarly, the Dubai-based Gulf News reported that members of various tribes—including the al-Shuhooh to which the most prominent of the arrested activists, Ahmed Mansoor, belonged—gathered to “show solidarity and support to the government.” Gulf News also relayed that “most of the tribes in the emirate of Abu Dhabi” had agreed to file a lawsuit against the activists. I asked Mansoor, who was denounced by leaders of his own tribe, about the reason he never uses his tribal affiliation. He informed me that he “doesn’t like fostering tribalism” and that as a human rights activist he “would like people to deal with each other in a more abstract way” since a tribal name “orients people here.”

Prior to the high profile trial, the UAE embarked on a controversial campaign to "change and unify the designations of tribes as per the new list" according to directives from the Ministry of the Interior. Most objections were made on socal media, since this was an official decree that could not be criticized in the public media. Families whose names sounded alike, such as Al Abdoul and Al Abdouli, were allegedly due to be lumped together. Objections to such actions stem from the fact that one family is of Arab Bedouin descent and the other is of Persian descent. However, the UAE is not the first Arab state to alter family names; in 1959, former President Bourguiba of Tunisia embarked on a similar exercise, although citizens were allowed greater flexibility in changing their tribal names. During the course of 2011, social media forums in the Emirates reportedthat the tribal name changes were not as significant as expected, which may be a nod of recognition and appreciation to the tribes for showing loyalty to the government.

Tribe Versus Religion

It is very simplistic of political observers to declare that the six Gulf Arab governments are bound to each other merely due to the Sunni nature of the regimes. In reality, the bonds highlighted above illustrate that tribalism plays no small part in these relations. Historically, in fact, Arabian Peninsula ruling families supported each other regardless of religious sect.

One of the strongest bonds between two families in the Gulf was that of Kuwait’s Sunni Al Sabah and the Shia Al Kaabi of the semi-state of Arabistan in the al-Ahwaz region, in what is today Iran’s southwestern Khuzestan Province. During his reign (1897 to 1925), Sheikh Khazal, the Arab Emir of Arabistan, was in constant contact with the tribal chiefs of Basra (both Sunni and Shia), Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia. In fact, he had called for an Arab alliance in the face of what he saw as a growing Persian threat. Relations had remained tense for over a century between the Bani Kaab of al-Ahwaz and al-Sabahs following a battle in 1783. They were only strengthened in the era of Sheikh Khazal Al Kaabi. In fact, Kuwait’s Sheikh Mubarak al-Kabeer granted Sheikh Khazal a prime plot in Dasman, where the latter built a palace that survived the invasion of Iraqi forces in 1990. The Kuwaiti government is currently renovating Sheikh Khazal’s house and will turn it into a museum. According to reports, in 2010, Iran destroyed the al-Faylia Palace of Sheikh Khazal, whose family was expelled to Kuwait in 1925.

In Yemen, on the other side of the Arabian Peninsula, a war broke out in the 1960s between the royalists—backed by Saudi Arabia and Jordan—and the Egyptian-backed republicans. Tribalism trumped religion in this proxy war as well, when Saudi Arabia supported Imam Mohammed al-Badr of the Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen, who followed a Shia sect known as Zaidiyyah, over its coreligionist, the Sunni Jamal Abdul Nasser of Egypt.

Furthermore, the ruling family of the Sultanate of Oman, which was promised ten billion dollars by the Gulf Arab States in March 2011 following civil unrest, adheres to the Ibadi sect of Islam, which is neither Sunni nor Shia, while in Iraq, tribes such as the Jiburi and the Shammar have both Sunni and Shia members. The Shammar, to whom the current Saudi King Abdullah’s mother Fahda bint Asi Al Shuraim belonged, and who claim to be 1.5 million strong in Iraq, extend as far deep into the Arabian Peninsula as Yemen and the UAE. In 2004, Sheikh Ghazi Ajil al-Yawar, one of the chiefs of the Shammar tribe who spent time in Saudi Arabia in the 1980s, was appointed interim president of Iraq. In 2004, Sheikh Al Yawer also became the first Iraqi president to visit Kuwaitsince the 1991 Gulf War. Following Al Yawar’s appointment, Salon magazine published a report titled “Saudi Arabia’s Man in Baghdad” and called the development “one of the White House's few smart moves.” Unsurprisingly, Riyadh congratulated Sheikh Al Yawar on the nomination, perhaps the last time it has done so to any Iraqi leader.

The tribes of central Arabia also displayed a degree of pragmatism that has gone missing in recent years, a phenomenon which may be an overreaction to the perceived threat of globalization. Amidst the male chauvinistic world of tribal Arabia, a woman was nominated by tribal elders to keep the peace between two of the Peninsula’s largest and most powerful tribes: Al Rashid and the Shammar. Following the death of her tribal chief husband, Fatima Al Zamil ruled the province of Ha’il from 1911 to 1914 as an administrator of her minor grandson's estate as a trustee of both tribes.

Tribal affiliation, however, can also be a reason for discrimination with regard to jobs and opportunities in the region, as well as a tool of collective punishment. In 2005, prior to a Saudi-Qatari rapprochement, the latter expelled thousands of members of the Al Ghafran clan of the Al Murrah tribe to Saudi Arabia after stripping them of their citizenship, forcing them to seek refuge in the eastern al-Ahsa region of the Kingdom.

Governance Through Tribalism

Tribal governance in the Arabian Peninsula today entails allocating certain government posts known as “sovereign portfolios” to family members. These portfolios include defense, foreign affairs, security, intelligence, the interior ministry, and the premiership. This system all but ensures complete allegiance and loyalty to the tribal leader, takes precedence over competence, and undermines meritocracy. Even within the ruling families, seldom do members whose mothers are of a non-tribal or foreign affiliation rise to prominence, although there are exceptions. I personally encountered much criticism online and in person following the publication of an article on the contributions of prominent Emirati citizens of mixed background, whom I was told were not “regular citizens.”

I have also noted in an article in Gulf News how, during the economic boom of the 2000s, tribal leaders in the Gulf neglected their historic duties such as meeting citizens in their majalis and listening to their demands, and instead spent more time in executive board rooms pursuing material gains. The tribal majlis or dewaniya culture became so important to Gulf states that it was one of the main launching pads of the civil society movement in states such as Kuwait, where the customary practice is now semi-institutionalized. In Kuwait, not only does the Emir pay the tribal majlis regular visits but so do foreign officials, such as the late Saudi Crown Prince and Defense Minister Sultan Bin Abdul Aziz who paid a private visit to these tribal gatherings in 2007. As in Kuwait, it is common for tribal leaders and citizens in the rest of the region to pay allegiance to Gulf leaders as well. The latest example was upon the nomination of Nayef bin Abdul Aziz as Saudi Crown Prince following his brother Sultan’s death. In keeping with tribal customs, citizens were invited to swear allegiance to Crown Prince Nayef in person and by proxy in front of provincial governors, who are usually members of the ruling Al Saud family.

Gregory Gause, professor of Political Science at the University of Vermont, has argued in his latest publicationon Saudi Arabia that the Al Saud relied on strong historical ties to central Arabian tribes along with the Wahhabi movement and vast oil wealth to build and sustain support in the kingdom. Gause attributes the relative stability of Saudi Arabia during the Arab uprisings to the security forces that “are recruited disproportionately (though not exclusively) from tribes and areas the regime sees as particularly loyal.” Tribal loyalty continues to be employed even within state borders as a tool of managing populations when the criteria for citizenship in a modern state should be measured in different metrics altogether. Additionally, Saudi political scientist Khalid Al Dakhil told Reuters that tribalism would take several decades to disappear and that the state “uses tribal mechanisms for political ends”.

Conclusion

Tribal connections in the region once formed a powerful force of resistance to colonial powers and contributed to a collective Arab peninsular identity. Historically, this network formed through tribal affiliations assured a layer of trust among its members that was vital for survival. Today, however, tribalism is perhaps second only to religion as the greatest obstacle standing in the way of a civil and democratic state in the Arabian Peninsula. Lately, tribalism has been a component of the so-called exceptionalism theory of the Gulf States monarchies that have weathered the Arab uprisings through a variety of means.

Tribalism effectively sidelines non-tribal and naturalized citizens in these countries. Such “irregular” individuals can never truly become integrated in tribal societies, even after decades of intermarriage. Unlike, say, a political party or social movement that a citizen can join, a tribal network is exclusive toward those not carrying a specific last name.

Tribalism also undermines alternative social and political affiliations, such as secularism, liberalism, socialism, and even Islamism, which already exist in the region in one form or another. Going forward, tribalism is likely to pose a challenge to the Peninsula States in their quest to advance from being “developing nations.” Loyalty to leaders of states that are mere decades old can come into question, either by the governments or rivals, when Arab tribes have for centuries transcended artificial borders imposed by imperial powers. Perhaps its biggest disadvantage is that tribalism is a sort of elite club that outsiders can never truly belong to. While it is not possible to negate, nor should it be, it is advisable for the countries of the Arabian Peninsula not to stoke the flames of tribalism, either through the media, favoritism or collective punishments, if they truly intend to build a modern civil state.

http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/4198/tribalism-in-the-arabian-peninsula_it-is-a-family-
 
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