Qatar-Kurdistan

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At the following article from Stratfor, titled “Turkey: Qatar Breaks With Arab League, Backs Air Campaign”, August 2015, you can read that the Arab League condemned the Turkish air strikes against the PKK in North Iraq (Iraqi Kurdistan), but Qatar expressed its full support for Turkey. Picture 1 That makes sense, given that from the Arab countries, Qatar is Turkey’s closest ally. Qatar is

Transcript of Qatar-Kurdistan

At the following article from Stratfor, titled “Turkey: Qatar Breaks With

Arab League, Backs Air Campaign”, August 2015, you can read that the

Arab League condemned the Turkish air strikes against the PKK in North

Iraq (Iraqi Kurdistan), but Qatar expressed its full support for Turkey.

Picture 1

That makes sense, given that from the Arab countries, Qatar is Turkey’s

closest ally. Qatar is a very small country but it is the richest country in the

world in terms of per capita GDP (GDP/population). Qatar has plenty of

liquidity to finance socialists in the European parliaments and Jihadists in

the battlefields, but in absolute terms Qatar cannot compete in military terms

with Saudi Arabia and Iran, because they are much bigger countries in

absolute terms. Qatar shares with Iran the largest natural gas field in the

world i.e. the South Pars/North Field, but at the same time it is surrounded

geographically by Saudi Arabia, which is the only country that connects

Qatar with the rest of the world by land.

Picture 2

Therefore Qatar wants to have a balanced stance towards the two big rivals

i.e. Saudi Arabia and Iran. But this is very difficult, and the two countries

put pressure on Qatar to support their own foreign policy. In Libya and

Egypt, Qatar fights on the side of Iran, and the same is true in Gaza, but in

Iraq and Syria, Qatar fights on the side of Saudi Arabia, actually on Turkey’s

side, but that’s against Iran, and in the Yemen war Qatar fights on the side of

Saudi Arabia, since Turkey is not really present in Yemen. Qatar needs

Turkey’s strong military presence as a shield against Saudi Arabia and Iran,

and recently Turkish soldiers went to Qatar, 100 years after the withdrawal

of the Turkish army from the Middle East, during the First World War.

Therefore Qatar has accepted Tayip Erdogan as the Sultan of the Muslim

World, something which is very difficult for the Saudis to do. Therefore the

relations between the Saudis and the Turks are very problematic, and the

Saudis are the main influence in the Arab League.

Picture 3