by Eli Leon, Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
U.S. President Barack Obama prepares to host Gulf Cooperation Council at the White House and then at Camp David • "We have to make sure any transfer of weapons to anyone in the region won't undermine Israel's ability to defend itself," one official says.
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                                            U.S. President Barack Obama 
with Saudi King Salman bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud                           
                     
                                                 
|Photo credit: AP  | 
U.S. President Barack Obama is expected to 
make a renewed push next week to help Gulf allies create a region-wide 
defense system to guard against Iranian missiles, as he seeks to allay 
their anxieties over any nuclear deal with Tehran, according to U.S. 
sources.
The offer could be accompanied by enhanced 
security commitments, new arms sales -- including technology previously 
only offered to Israel -- and more joint military exercises, U.S. 
officials say, as Obama tries to reassure Gulf Arab countries that 
Washington is not abandoning them.
Following U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry's
 visit to Saudi Arabia this week, officials say several arms sales are 
likely, including resupplying bombs and missiles depleted in the 
Saudi-led air assault in Yemen and in strikes against Islamic State 
militants in the U.S.-led air campaign in Syria.
According to a report in the Washington Times,
 the U.S. administration is weighing whether to offer Riyadh GBU-28 
bunker-buster bombs, which it has until now provided only to Israel -- a
 move that would conflict with a long-standing American commitment to 
Israel's regional military superiority as per a 2008 congressional 
mandate.
"We have to make sure any transfer of weapons 
to anyone in the region won't undermine Israel's ability to defend 
itself," one official said in the report. 
If the U.S. decides to supply the Gulf States 
with the GBU-28 bombs, it could avoid violating the mandate by offering 
Israel the newer and stronger GBU-57. However, it is reluctant to share 
the technology with any other nation, including Israel. 
Washington is likely to stand firm on its 
decision to withhold from Gulf allies the purchase of Lockheed's new 
top-flight F-35 fighter jet, another U.S. official said. The F-35 has 
been promised to Israel, with delivery of the stealth warplane set to 
begin next year.
At the same time, Kuwait's proposed purchase 
of 28 Boeing Co. F/A-18E/F Super Hornet advanced fighter jets, valued at
 more than $3 billion, is likely to be discussed, but it is unclear 
whether the deal will be finalized in the near future, a U.S. official 
said. An announcement is expected in coming weeks, according to people 
familiar with the deal.
With little more than a week to go before 
Obama hosts the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council -- Bahrain, Kuwait, 
Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates -- at the White 
House and then at Camp David, aides are discussing the options in 
pre-summit meetings with Arab diplomats. Officials say no final 
decisions on possible U.S. proposals have been made.
Obama faces a formidable challenge in deciding
 how far to go to sell skeptical Sunni-led allies on his top foreign 
policy priority, a final nuclear deal with Shiite Iran due by a June 30 
deadline. Failure to placate them could further strain ties, though 
additional defense obligations would carry the risk of the United States
 being drawn into new Middle East conflicts.
Obama issued the invitation to the GCC to 
attend the May 13-14 summit after Iran and six world powers reached a 
framework agreement last month that would give Tehran sanctions relief 
for reining in its nuclear program.
Gulf Arab neighbors, including key U.S. ally 
Saudi Arabia, worry that Iran will not be deterred from a nuclear bomb 
and will be flush with cash from unfrozen assets to fund proxies and 
expand its influence in countries such as Syria, Yemen and Lebanon.
'Two-way street'
U.S. officials with knowledge of the internal 
discussions concede that Obama is under pressure to calm Arab fears by 
offering strengthened commitments.
"It's a time to see what things might be required to be formalized," a senior U.S. official said.
Obama is all but certain to stop short of a 
full security treaty with Saudi Arabia or other Gulf nations as that 
would require approval by the Republican-controlled Senate and risk 
stoking tensions with Washington's main Middle East ally, Israel.
A second U.S. official insisted the summit 
would be a "two-way street," with Washington pushing Gulf leaders to 
overcome internal rivalries and find ways to collaborate better in their
 own defense.
Obama is likely to press Gulf allies to do 
more to integrate their disparate militaries and work toward a 
long-delayed anti-missile shield against an Iranian ballistic missile 
threat, the sources familiar with the discussions said. This could take 
the form of a new high-level joint working group led by the Pentagon, 
one of the sources said.
Gulf countries have already bought U.S. 
missile defense systems such as the Patriot system built by Raytheon Co.
 and the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense system built by Lockheed 
Martin Corp.
But the Obama administration is now expected 
to press them to implement the initiative touted in late 2013 by 
then-Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel.
The program allows the GCC to purchase 
equipment as a bloc and start knitting together radars, sensors and 
early warning networks with U.S. assistance but has been held up by 
distrust among some of the Gulf monarchies.
The Obama administration is concerned about 
shortcomings in the Gulf states' joint operational capacity exposed by a
 Saudi-led bombing campaign in Yemen that has failed to push back 
Iran-allied Houthi fighters.
Concrete steps
It was unclear specifically what Washington 
would offer the Gulf nations -- which already operate some of the most 
evolved U.S.-made weaponry -- to advance the missile shield. Lingering 
rifts between GCC members, especially Qatar and the United Arab 
Emirates, would need to be put aside before a joint missile system would
 be viable.
Experts now believe the time is ripe for greater cooperation because of deteriorating security across the region.
"Missile defense is absolutely critical to the
 GCC right now," said Riki Ellison, founder of the nonprofit Missile 
Defense Advocacy Alliance.
"They're not as efficient playing separately as they would be all playing as one team," he said.
Wary that Obama might keep any new security 
pledges vague, Gulf states have also made clear they want this 
translated into concrete steps.
"This summit can't just be a big photo opportunity to pretend everybody's on the same page on Iran," one Arab diplomat said.
      Eli Leon, Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=25301
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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