The
United States will confront a new and very different set of challenges
in its relationship with the G.C.C. states over the coming four years.
For the first time since the end of World War II, a new administration
will come to power in Washington next January facing a ‘trust deficit’
in its management of relations with its G.C.C. partners. The
overwhelming Congressional vote to override President Barack Obama’s
veto of the JASTA legislation was interpreted in the region as a
lessening of popular support for the U.S.-G.C.C. relationship. The vote
thus reinforced growing skepticism in the Gulf that the United States
will remain a reliable and consistent guarantor of regional security and
stability that is the predictable consequence of a series of U.S.
actions and policy choices from Syria to the Arab Spring to the Iran
nuclear deal. This is not to say that the administration’s decisions in
all of these cases were flawed, but they did engender doubts among our
partners.
Challenges in U.S.-G.C.C. Relations http://www.mei.edu/content/article/us-gcc-relations-recommendations-next-administration
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