The Mercury News

Trump, Tillerson send mixed signals on Qatar

- By Josh Lederman

WASHINGTON — In an extraordin­ary broadside against a key U.S. partner, President Donald Trump lambasted Qatar on Friday for funding terrorism “at a very high level” and insisted that it stop. “No more funding,” the president said.

Trump’s condemnati­on contradict­ed the message delivered by his secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, who had urged Qatar’s neighbors to ease their blockade while calling for “calm and thoughtful dialogue.” Only an hour later, Tillerson sat in the front row in the Rose Garden as Trump enthusiast­ically embraced the move by Saudi Arabia, Egypt and others to punish Qatar.

“The nation of Qatar, unfortunat­ely, has historical­ly been a funder of terrorism at a very high level,” Trump said, echoing an allegation the Saudi-led group has used to justify cutting diplomatic ties to the tiny gasrich kingdom. “We have to stop the funding of terrorism.”

Despite Tillerson’s call for there to be “no further escalation,” Trump’s sharp comments were likely to further embolden Saudi Arabia and the others in their bid to isolate Qatar. The State Department had said the U.S. learned only at the last minute about the Arab nations’ plan to cut ties.

But Trump said that he, Tillerson and military leaders had decided during Trump’s trip to Saudi Arabia last month that a public rebuke was needed.

“The time had come to call on Qatar to end its funding — they have to end that funding — and its extremist ideology in terms of funding,” Trump said. Though the president said others, too, were guilty of supporting terrorism, he said he would not name them.

In a day of mixed messages and chaotic diplomacy, Tillerson emphasized the economic, humanitari­an and military damage he said the blockade was inflicting. He said families were being separated, children removed from school and Qataris forced to deal with food shortages.

“We believe these are unintended consequenc­es, especially during this Holy Month of Ramadan, but they can be addressed immediatel­y,” he said.

Tillerson also said the blockade by Qatar’s neighbors was “hindering U.S. military action in the region, and the campaign against ISIS,” using an acronym for the Islamic State group. But at the Pentagon, a spokesman, Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, said only long-term military planning was affected. Davis said the diplomatic rift has not interrupte­d or curtailed operations at al-Udeid air base, a launching pad for U.S. military efforts in Iraq, Syria and Afghanista­n.

Still, the Pentagon has been developing contingenc­y plans in case there’s any interrupti­on, defense officials said. Aircraft that fly out of Qatar — including fighter jets, drones and refueling planes — can be relocated to a number of other bases in the region including in Iraq, Turkey, Kuwait and Bahrain and off aircraft carriers, the officials said.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear how Qatar, which hosts some 10,000 U.S. troops, might respond to Trump’s critique. The Qatari Embassy in Washington did not respond to a request for comment.

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