The National: Arab countries urge Qatar to accept six broader 'principles'
Diplomats from the four countries confirmed at the United Nations in New York that the six principles - which do not have a deadline - were the perimeters of any future talks.
The four Arab countries isolating Qatar say a broader set of six “principles” will set the perimeters of any future talks on ending the crisis.
This could indicate that the quartet is now more willing to engage in the mediation process led by Kuwait and backed by the United States, United Nations and European powers.
“Of course we are all for compromise, but there will be no compromise on these six principles,” said Abdallah Al Mouallimi, Saudi Arabia’s UN ambassador.
The six principles - which Qatar rejected as violating its sovereignty and mediators from the US and elsewhere criticised - was first announced in Cairo two weeks ago after the foreign ministers of the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Bahrain met there to determine their response to Doha’s rejection.
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WNU Editor: I expected last month that Qatar would cave-in to most of these demands in 2 or 3 months .... since the Arab bloc itself was not seriously impacted by these sanctions against Qatar, and they were well positioned to really put the screws to Qatar's financial institutions if they wanted. So why the change among the Arab bloc .... I suspect that it is because of pressure from other Arab states, and the U.S.. There are bigger issues at play right now in Syria and Iraq .... and in this context the Qatar crisis was/is an unwelcome diversion. What I am now curious about is .... will Qatar accept these six "broader principles". My gut says yes .... that US Secretary of State Tillerson's shuttle diplomacy last week on the Qatar crisis has already laid the ground work for an agreement, and it is just a question of time before it is publicly announced.
More News On The Qatar Crisis
Arab states back down from demands, urge Qatar to accept new principles -- AP
Saudi-led bloc modifies demands to end Qatar crisis -- Qatar
Countries That Broke Ties With Qatar Indicate Some Flexibility on Demands -- New York Times
Qatar Crisis: Saudi-led Coalition Drops 13 Demands to End the Boycott -- Haaretz
Gulf Countries Cut List of Demands for Qatar by Half, Revoke Deadlines -- Sputnik