Qatar crisis: Key US Republican lawmaker threatens to block arms to Gulf | World News - Hindustan Times
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Qatar crisis: Key US Republican lawmaker threatens to block arms to Gulf

Washington | ByAgence France-Presse
Jun 27, 2017 03:52 PM IST

Senate foreign relations committee chairman Bob Corker said disputes among the GCC countries only serve to hurt efforts to fight Islamic State and counter Iran.

A top Republican lawmaker on Monday threatened to block US arms sales to members of the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council including Saudi Arabia until their escalating rift with Qatar is resolved.

File photo of senate foreign relations committee chairman Bob Corker.(AP)
File photo of senate foreign relations committee chairman Bob Corker.(AP)

“All countries in the region need to do more to combat terrorism, but recent disputes among the GCC countries only serve to hurt efforts to fight ISIS and counter Iran,” Bob Corker, chairman of the senate foreign relations committee, said in a letter to secretary of state Rex Tillerson.

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“For these reasons, before we provide any further clearances during the informal review period on sales of lethal military equipment to the GCC states, we need a better understanding of the path to resolve the current dispute and reunify the GCC.”

US law requires the state department to notify Congress 30 days before it sells major military equipment. Congress in turn has the power to vote to block the sale.

In addition, the chairs and vice chairs of the Senate and House committees on foreign relations must give their “preliminary approval,” according to Corker’s office.

Corker’s block threatens to put the Donald Trump administration’s Middle East diplomacy efforts at risk.

Saudi Arabia severed ties with gas-rich Qatar on June 5, with Riyadh accusing the emirate of links to terrorism and of supporting groups, including some backed by Iran, that aim to destabilise the region. Bahrain, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Yemen and the Maldives also cut diplomatic ties with Doha.

Trump has allied Washington more closely to Saudi Arabia since taking office in January, as a way to boost the fight against the Islamic State extremist group.

Qatar houses the largest US airbase in the Middle East and the command headquarters for US military operations in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan, and Tillerson has been engaged in seeking to resolve the row.

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