Erdogan goes on tax collector mission to Doha
Informed Gulf sources described Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s short visit to Doha on Thursday as a tax collection
mission, just like his Ottoman ancestors used to do with their former Arab
colonies for centuries. He was in Doha to get Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin
Hamad al-Thani to dig deep in his pockets and come up with the necessary funds
for the Eastern Mediterranean project.
This came at a time when former Qatari Prime
Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani hinted that Turkey was ready to fill
the void that would result from a partial or full American withdrawal from
al-Udeid Airbase in Qatar.
Erdogan arrived in Doha accompanied by his usual
sidekicks on such missions, namely his son-in-law and Minister of Finance and
Treasury Berat Albayrak, Defence Minister Hulusi Akar and head of intelligence
services Hakan Fidan.
The official Qatari news agency stated that Sheikh
Tamim discussed with Erdogan "the strategic relations" between the
two countries and ways to support and enhance them in various fields,
especially economic, investment and commercial cooperation, energy and defence
“in a way that realizes the common interests of the two countries and of the
two brotherly peoples.”
The Gulf sources said that the Turkish president is
pressuring Qatar to finance his military campaigns in Syria and Libya, and the
military show of force he is conducting in the Mediterranean Sea, in a
throwback that illustrious the period of Ottoman piracy in the Mediterranean
under the leadership of the fearsome Oruc Reis and Captain Hayreddin
Barbarossa. These and all of Erdogan’s other foreign adventures require that
Qatar keep its commitment to finance them.
The sources noted that Turkey is asking Qatar to
fund the project that Ankara was unable to implement, despite pumping huge
funds in order to impose the rule of Islamist groups in the countries of the
“Arab spring." With logistical, financial and media backing from Qatar,
Turkey is still pursuing that project through direct military intervention in
Libya and the use of soft power in Tunisia, Yemen, Somalia and the whole of the
Horn of Africa.
Qatar’s relationship with the new Ottoman sultan is
certainly costing it an arm and a leg, and this is perhaps the heavy price of
arrogance. Erdogan knew how to take full advantage of the incredible
stubbornness and arrogance of the Qatari ruling class and succeeded in
convincing them to stay away from the option of returning to the Gulf fold. His
plan was, and still is, to blackmail them and turn them into the cash cow that
will save the Turkish economy from its chronic structural crisis, as well as
finance his imperial dream of restoring his Ottoman ancestors’ glory and
influence, which means that Qatar is going to be haplessly stuck with the bill
for an unknown period of time.
In return, the Turkish president is pushing the
Qataris to let Qatar’s relations with its traditional allies fester and wither.
This means Doha's relations in the Gulf, and especially with Saudi Arabia, and
even the United States. Ccontroversial former Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh
Hamad bin Jassim has hinted that Qatar has “alternatives” up its sleeve should
Washington decide to reduce its military presence at al-Udeid airbase.
Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim's statements about al-Udeid
seem particularly strange because they coincided with Erdogan's visit to Doha.
According to observers, they reflect a serious concern among Qatari officials
about the United States making good on its threat to pull out its soldiers from
al-Udeid base as a reaction to Doha's building of a network of ties to militant
Islamist groups and spending billions in financing terrorist activities.
Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim tweeted that the United
States may lose “the advantages coming from selling sophisticated weapons and
the strength that various American companies derive from American military
power,” and that “when American military power withdraws from the countries
where it is located, these companies will follow it, because many countries
heed American influence only because of its military might worldwide.”
"As history has taught us, the rules of the
game change dramatically whenever there is a withdrawal of world power. An
example of that is the British military might, on whose worldwide bases the sun
never set. (The British Empire) was reaping many advantages thanks to that
might. But today, the world is witnessing how the British Isles are being
dismembered now that its bases had disappeared and its sun had set,” bin Jassim
added.
In other words, the former Qatari official was
warning Washington that reducing the number of its forces in Qatar would
automatically mean losing the economic benefits that American companies reap
there. Observers of Gulf affairs remarked that Qatar is now adopting a bullying
attitude because of Turkey's growing influence in the country. This influence
has multiple facets but is mostly seen at the military level through increasing
the numbers of Turkish soldiers at the military base.
For its part, Turkey is not shy about its desire to
extend its influence over Qatar and turn it into an advanced base for its
hegemony in the Gulf region. In fact, Erdogan himself hinted at that during his
visit to Qatar last November, when he claimed that his country's military
presence in Qatar protected it when its crisis with the Gulf states erupted.
It is no surprise then that Doha continues to defy
its Gulf neighbours by ignoring their demands, especially those related to
ending Turkish and Iranian interference that threaten the national security of
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states.




