GCC — The Case For 'Unification'!
12 December 2016
By Dr. Khaled M. Batarfi
IN 1982, I was in Bahrain — my first visit ever. It was celebration time. The
island nation was happy and proud. The official and popular mood was festive.
People were hospitable and eager to please. They had a good reason. The Gulf
Cooperation Council was convening for its second summit.
Head of Gulf Arab states were arriving with large delegations in Manama
airport, one after the other. Streets, buildings and cars were decorated with
leaders' pictures and the six nations' flags, and people were waving them.
GCC is a pioneering project, envisioned by the Emir of Kuwait, Jaber Al-Sabah
during a meeting in 1976 with UAE President Sheikh Zaid Al-Nuhian in Abu
Dhabi. It couldn't wait longer.
The world around us was boiling. Iran had a new regime. The ''Islamic Republic
of Iran'' succeeded a constitutional empire with thousands of years' legacy.
The revolution brought Ayatollah Khomeini back from his chosen exile in Paris,
with the support of the US, Britain and France, as recent revelations showed.
The Shah of Iran had to leave on an American ''advice,'' and the army did not
interfere (following the same advice). The new republic was soon established
(1979) with a constitution that stipulates a certain school of Shiism (Aljafaria)
as the official religion of the nation (excluding Sunnah and other sects and
religions), and calls for the exportation of that brand of Islam in the form
of revolution.
Iraq was their first target, and Saddam knew if he had waited longer, a
sectarian conflict would have burned his country to ashes, and Iran would have
used the opportunity to take back what it regards as its historical land.
Saddam calculated that if he waited longer, Iran would regain its stability
and strength, while Iraq would be weakened by such religious strife. He chose
the timing of an inevitable war on Sept. 22, 1980, hoping to finish it sooner
but Iran finally accepted UN peace plan in August 1988.
The volatile Gulf region was caught in the crossfire. Kuwait was hit by
Iranian missiles and coup attempts. Saudi Arabia and Bahrain's Shiite
minorities were targeted by Iranian propaganda and influence. Oil tankers were
hit by both countries. And falling oil prices and production led to recession
in Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states. Solidarity was urgently and vitally
needed, so the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) was born in Riyadh in May 1981,
as a political and economic alliance of six Arab monarchies — Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman.
Their combined armed forces comprise over a million active soldiers with top
Western military training and equipment. The Saudi-led Peninsula Shield Force
was established in 1982 with 100,000 soldiers. The unified economic agreement
between the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council was signed in Abu Dhabi
on Nov. 11, 1981.
Stated objectives included: Formulating similar regulations in various fields
such as religion, finance, trade, customs, tourism, legislation, and
administration; Fostering scientific and technical progress in industry,
mining, agriculture, water and animal resources; Establishing scientific
research centers; Setting up joint ventures; Unified military (Peninsula
Shield Force); Encouraging cooperation of the private sector; Strengthening
ties between member states' peoples; And establishing a common currency.
A 2011 proposal to transform the GCC into a ''Gulf Union'' (as envisioned in
its constitution) with tighter economic, political and military coordination
has been advanced by Saudi Arabia, a move meant to counterbalance the Iranian
influence in the region.
Thirty-five years since its inception, the project is still standing,
prospering and making more sense everyday. Iran, the ''mother ship of evil,''
is still exporting terror, war and religious conflicts to its Arab neighbors
and the world beyond. Its Revolutionary Guards and Shiite militias are
marching on Arab countries, killing Sunni Arabs, destroying lands and running
proxy governments.
The danger to the healthy Arab states that hasn't been infected with Iranian
virus, yet, is present and clear. More so in the Arabian Gulf region. The US,
French and UK officials have spoken before, but the British PM, Theresa May,
had the last word. In her televised speech to the GCC Summit in Bahrain (Dec.
7, 2016), she promised to help Gulf states ''push back'' against aggressive
regional actions by Iran.
''We must… continue to confront state actors whose influence fuels instability
in the region, so I want to assure you that I am clear-eyed about the threat
that Iran poses to the Gulf and to the wider Middle East.''
She added: ''We must… work together to push back against Iran's aggressive
regional actions.''
The Manama GCC Summit has concluded on a positive note. Union is back on the
radar screen. It may not be fully implemented, or at once. It could start with
the ready members, and be like 5+2, waiting for, say, Oman and Yemen to fully
join. In any case, we would be better off unified… hopefully by 2020, if not
sooner.
— Dr. Khaled M. Batarfi is a Saudi writer based in Jeddah. He can be
reached at kbatarfi@gmail.com. Follow him at Twitter:@kbatarfi
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