Kuwaiti emir to meet Trump to discuss Gulf crisis

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Emir of Kuwait Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah greets members of Kuwait National Assembly during the opening ceremony of the new legislative year in Kuwait City, on October 27, 2015. Kuwait's ruler called on the government and parliament to carry out urgent economic reforms after state income dropped 60 percent due to a sharp slide in oil prices. AFP PHOTO / YASSER AL-ZAYYAT

The emir of Kuwait will hold talks with US President Donald Trump in Washington, DC next week, according to the Kuwaiti state media, as a three-month-old diplomatic crisis splits the Gulf.

KUNA news agency said on Thursday that Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmad Al Sabah would depart for the United States on Friday and the Trump meeting was scheduled for September 7.

The emir is a key mediator between Qatar and its neighbours—Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.

The trio and Egypt cut diplomatic and economic ties with Qatar on June 5, imposing an air, land and marine blockade on the country, accusing it of ties to Iran and “extremist groups” as well as interference in their internal affairs.

Qatar denies the claims and accuses the other countries of an attack on its sovereignty.

On Thursday, Qatar’s Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammad bin Abdulrahman Al Thani called on the blockading countries to stop attempting to influence his country’s foreign policy.

“There is no [evidence] against Qatar. Qatar never interferes in any country’s politics, and doesn’t accept others to interfere in our politics,” he said at a news conference in Brussels, Belgium.

The US has given mixed signals about its policy on the Gulf crisis.

Trump immediately expressed his support for Saudi Arabia, but some other US officials, including Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, later adopted a more measured tone.

On Wednesday, Trump spoke with Saudi King Salman and urged an end to the dispute.

Riyadh and Doha are both key allies of the US.

Trump chose Saudi Arabia for his first overseas visit as president in May, two weeks before the Gulf crisis erupted.

Qatar is meanwhile home to a huge US air base, where the headquarters of Centcom—the regional command which leads operations against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group—is based.