Pompeo’s Mideast tour fails to achieve its goals: experts

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CAIRO: The Middle East tour of U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was not successful as it has

not fully achieved its goals, experts said.

Pompeo on Monday cut short his Middle East tour over a family funeral.

“Secretary Pompeo will return to the United States after his meetings in Muscat, Oman,” State

Department Deputy Spokesman Robert Palladino said in an emailed statement. “This curtailment of travel is required so that the Pompeo family may attend a family funeral.”

The U.S. top diplomat’s tour covered Jordan, Egypt, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Oman and Qatar.

Palladino said Pompeo will look to visit Kuwait at an agreeable time in the near future.

“The main goal of the visit is to establish an Arab alliance… there are other minor goals, of course,” Noha Bakir, professor of political sciences with the American University in Cairo, told Xinhua.

Based on that main objective, the countries of the tour were carefully chosen, she said, adding the most important pillar for building that alliance was to bring Qatar back to the Arab alliance.

While in Qatar, Pompeo called for ending the continuing crisis between Qatar and mainly its Gulf neighbors.

“We are all more powerful when we are working together and disputes are limited. When we have a common challenge, disputes between countries with shared objectives are never helpful,” Pompeo told reporters in Doha.

“There is no consensus among the Arabs to resolve the Qatari crisis. The priorities of the Arab countries on Iran are also completely different,” Bakir said.

Delivering a major speech at the American University in Cairo on Thursday, Pompeo said countries of the Middle East will never enjoy security, achieve economic stability, or advance dreams of their peoples if Iran’s regime persists on its current course.

While Pompeo focused on forming an alliance to defy Iran’s influence, the Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry focused on combating terrorism in all its forms, she said, stressing that Pompeo did not touch upon the Palestinian cause, which is the main priority for Egypt.

She explained that Pompeo’s visit wasn’t successful as aspired by the U.S. side, adding that his tour was met with Arab dissatisfaction in general.

Meanwhile, professor of political sciences with Cairo University, Tariq Fahmy, said Pompeo’s visit has not brought successful results “because the U.S. side wanted only to focus on the political vacuum in Syria and the Arab region, as well as Qatari crisis.”

“The agendas of Arab countries forced Pompeo to get far from his own agenda during his tour,” Fahmy told Xinhua. “Pompeo came to market the U.S. administration policies as the power that rescues the Arab region, while the Arabs delivered a message that they can handle their own problems.”