Qatar PM Condemns Iran Attacks in Call with Foreign Minister

The skyline of Doha, Qatar, 04 March 2026. (EPA)
The skyline of Doha, Qatar, 04 March 2026. (EPA)
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Qatar PM Condemns Iran Attacks in Call with Foreign Minister

The skyline of Doha, Qatar, 04 March 2026. (EPA)
The skyline of Doha, Qatar, 04 March 2026. (EPA)

Qatar's prime minister condemned Iran's attacks on Gulf states in a call with Tehran's foreign minister Wednesday, the first high-level contact since the Islamic republic launched its missile and drone campaign. 

Qatari premier Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani accused Iran of seeking to "harm its neighbors and drag them into a war that is not theirs", on the call with Iran's Abbas Araghchi, according to a statement by Qatar's foreign ministry. 

Gulf countries have borne much of Tehran's response since the US and Israel launched a massive air campaign against Iran over the weekend with an 11-year-old girl killed in Kuwait on Wednesday by falling shrapnel. 

Thirteen people, seven of them civilians, have been killed in countries around the Gulf since the war began. 

The Pentagon has announced the deaths of six US servicemen since Saturday, four of them in Kuwait. 

The Qatari prime minister urged "an immediate halt to these attacks" on the call and said Iran had "struck civilian and residential areas" despite Araghchi's assertion "the Iranian missile attacks were directed at US interests and did not target the State of Qatar". 

"These attacks cannot pass without a response," Sheikh Mohammed added. 

Kuwait's health ministry said "resuscitation was performed in the ambulance while the girl was being transported to the hospital," adding attempts continued for nearly half an hour at Al-Amiri Hospital but she "passed away due to her injuries". 

The United Arab Emirates and Qatar said they had intercepted Iranian drone and missile barrages, with the UAE reporting it engaged three ballistic missiles and intercepted 121 of 129 drones, while Qatar said it shot down 10 drones and two cruise missiles. 

- Stocks drop - 

Earlier, Kuwait's military said it detected incoming projectiles and was working to intercept the missiles and drones in its airspace. 

Bahrain said residents could register as volunteers to aid war efforts in sectors including health. 

In Saudi Arabia, the defense ministry said two cruise missiles were intercepted over an area south of the capital Riyadh, which is also home to the sprawling Prince Sultan air base, and several drones were destroyed after entering its airspace. 

Saudi Arabia said on Wednesday it intercepted a drone targeting its massive Ras Tanura refinery on the Gulf coast, days after a Monday strike on the complex forced some operations to halt following a fire. 

"Initial estimates indicate that the attack was carried out by a drone and did not result in any damage," the ministry said in a statement. 

The war continued to rattle the Gulf elsewhere with stocks dropping sharply in the United Arab Emirates on the Dubai and Abu Dhabi exchanges after a two-day trading suspension. 

The main Dubai index fell 4.7 percent, while Abu Dhabi's dropped nearly two percent. 

Qatar authorities also announced they had dismantled two spy cells linked to Iran's Revolutionary Guards, its official press agency reported. 

"Close surveillance made it possible to arrest 10 suspects: seven were tasked with spying and gathering information about vital and military infrastructure in the country, and three were meant to carry out sabotage operations," the agency said. 

Iranian missiles and drones have slammed Gulf states' cities and infrastructure, upending relations with Tehran and placing the neighbors on a potential course for greater military confrontation. 



NATO, Gulf States Discuss Regional Security, Encourage Closer Cooperation

NATO foreign ministers and their Gulf counterparts participating in the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative meet on the sidelines of the alliance’s summit in Ankara. (Turkish Foreign Ministry)
NATO foreign ministers and their Gulf counterparts participating in the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative meet on the sidelines of the alliance’s summit in Ankara. (Turkish Foreign Ministry)
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NATO, Gulf States Discuss Regional Security, Encourage Closer Cooperation

NATO foreign ministers and their Gulf counterparts participating in the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative meet on the sidelines of the alliance’s summit in Ankara. (Turkish Foreign Ministry)
NATO foreign ministers and their Gulf counterparts participating in the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative meet on the sidelines of the alliance’s summit in Ankara. (Turkish Foreign Ministry)

Foreign ministers from NATO member states and their counterparts from Gulf countries participating in the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative agreed to strengthen cooperation in response to the challenges highlighted by the Iran war.

The meeting, held late Tuesday into early Wednesday on the sidelines of NATO's 36th summit in Ankara, focused on regional security developments, the security of maritime routes, and strengthening the partnership between NATO and the initiative's participating countries.

The meeting took place as part of Türkiye's efforts, as host of NATO's 36th summit, to discuss the Iran war and its repercussions for the region and the wider world.

It came after weeks of tensions in the Strait of Hormuz, despite the United States and Iran reaching a temporary peace agreement.

Strengthening cooperation

Ahead of the meeting, Belgian Foreign Minister Maxime Prevot said the stability of Gulf states, which came under Iranian attacks during the war with the United States and Israel, was closely linked to Europe’s stability.

He said the issue went beyond the Strait of Hormuz, despite its vital importance to European energy security.

Gulf representatives at the meeting stressed the importance of strengthening cooperation with NATO.

Kuwait, which hosts the headquarters of the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative, was represented at the meeting by Foreign Minister Sheikh Jarrah bin Jaber Al-Ahmad.

He held talks with Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan at the Turkish Foreign Ministry on Monday, on the eve of the NATO summit, focusing on bilateral relations and regional issues.

Bahrain’s delegation was headed by Sheikh Abdullah bin Ali Al Khalifa, director general of bilateral relations at the Foreign Ministry.

Qatar’s delegation chief, Minister of State at the Foreign Ministry Dr. Mohammed Al-Khulaifi, announced during the meeting that Qatar and NATO had reached an agreement on a partnership program, though the details were not disclosed.

He said the program would establish a comprehensive strategic framework to organize and guide civilian and military cooperation between the two sides.

He said Qatar attached great importance to strengthening its cooperation with the alliance under the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative. He also said the two sides were nearing the final stage of establishing a regional center for peace support operations in Qatar under NATO sponsorship.

Al-Khulaifi said the Ankara meeting came at a pivotal stage, when security and political challenges had become more interconnected and complex, and international interests more intertwined.

He said this made it necessary to unify efforts and strengthen coordination to confront challenges that affect the security of Middle Eastern states and threaten the foundations of regional and international stability.

The Istanbul Initiative and the ‘Iran war’

The Istanbul Initiative, which had remained a suspended framework during successive crises in the region, regained importance amid recent developments and the war involving the United States, Israel and Iran.

Türkiye sees value in turning it into an effective tool in cooperation with countries bearing the brunt of regional instability.

NATO leaders launched the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative at their summit in Istanbul on June 28, 2004, as a partnership framework aimed at strengthening practical cooperation in counterterrorism, energy security, air defense and joint military exercises.

The initiative came after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States, when NATO activated Article 5 of its founding treaty for the first time in its history.

That increased the importance of regional partnerships and cooperation mechanisms, after threats such as terrorism, which cross borders and require a collective response, showed the need for NATO to engage in closer political and practical cooperation with regional partners.

The initiative followed an earlier move to deepen NATO’s partnership with North African countries through the 1994 Mediterranean Dialogue.

Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates joined the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative, which was launched as a broad framework for cooperation in the Middle East and North Africa after the Mediterranean Dialogue, beginning with the Gulf region in 2005.

Saudi Arabia and Oman did not join but continue to participate only in selected activities under the initiative.

Objectives of the initiative

The initiative aims to strengthen regional and international security and stability by building practical bilateral partnerships with Middle Eastern countries, with a main focus on interested countries, especially in the Gulf region.

The Istanbul Cooperation Initiative Group, composed of political advisers from NATO member states, was created to manage relations between the alliance and its partner countries. It was later replaced by the Political Partnerships Committee, which is responsible for managing all NATO partnership relations.

The initiative’s regional center was established in Kuwait in January 2017 as a key hub for training, education and strengthening operational partnership between NATO and ICI member states in the Gulf region.

Former NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg took part in meetings held in Kuwait in 2024 to mark 20 years since the launch of the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative.

NATO has also appointed a special representative for the southern neighbourhood to lead the alliance’s engagement and cooperation with partners in the Middle East, North Africa and the Sahel, including partners in the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative.

The role is aimed at strengthening partnership and cooperation on issues such as defense planning, defense budgeting and development, and civil-military relations, while taking into account the specific circumstances of each country.

It also aims to establish cooperation enabling coordinated operations between NATO armed forces and partner countries, allowing them to participate in NATO exercises.

The role also includes coordinating specific exercise programs and cooperation on counterterrorism through intelligence sharing, preventing the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and their delivery systems, and border security.

It focuses mainly on terrorism, the uncontrolled spread of small arms, smuggling and the development of a civil emergency action plan to respond to natural disasters.


Saudi, Omani Foreign Ministers Discuss Strategic Partnership

Saudi Minister of Foreign Affairs Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah holding talks in Muscat with Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Albusaidi - SPA
Saudi Minister of Foreign Affairs Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah holding talks in Muscat with Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Albusaidi - SPA
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Saudi, Omani Foreign Ministers Discuss Strategic Partnership

Saudi Minister of Foreign Affairs Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah holding talks in Muscat with Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Albusaidi - SPA
Saudi Minister of Foreign Affairs Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah holding talks in Muscat with Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Albusaidi - SPA

Saudi Minister of Foreign Affairs Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah met on Wednesday in Muscat with Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Albusaidi, with whom he reviewed relations between the two countries and their peoples and discussed ways to strengthen them to serve mutual interests, elevate bilateral cooperation, and advance joint Gulf action.

Following their meeting, the two ministers held an official session of talks to review cooperation and enhance their strategic partnership across various fields.

They discussed the latest regional and international developments, focusing on issues surrounding the Strait of Hormuz. Both sides emphasized the importance of maintaining waterway security, ensuring freedom of navigation, and supporting peaceful dialogue to resolve disputes and enhance regional stability, SPA reported.

Discussions also addressed joint strategic initiatives, notably the land border crossing project, transportation networks, and logistics connectivity to support regional integration.

Also, they explored expanding economic, trade, and investment cooperation by encouraging public-private partnerships and capitalizing on promising sectors to fulfill the aspirations of both nations' leaderships.


GCC Secretary-General and ILO Director-General Discuss Cooperation Relations

Secretary-General of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Jasem Albudaiwi. SPA
Secretary-General of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Jasem Albudaiwi. SPA
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GCC Secretary-General and ILO Director-General Discuss Cooperation Relations

Secretary-General of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Jasem Albudaiwi. SPA
Secretary-General of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Jasem Albudaiwi. SPA

Secretary-General of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Jasem Albudaiwi met on Wednesday with Director-General of the International Labour Organization (ILO) Gilbert F. Houngbo in Geneva, Swiss Confederation.

At the beginning of the meeting, the secretary-general praised the efforts exerted by the ILO in promoting social justice and protecting workers’ rights, underscoring that the GCC states have developed numerous regulations and legislation to preserve and respect workers’ rights in line with international standards, SPA reported.

The ILO director-general expressed his appreciation and thanks to the GCC states for their significant support for the work of the ILO, commending the many steps taken by the GCC states in this regard.

A number of topics of common interest were also discussed during the meeting, most notably the review of cooperation relations between the GCC General Secretariat and the ILO, as well as several proposals to unify efforts between the two sides to advance the shared objectives of the GCC and the organization in this field.