Gulf rivalries spill on to the soccer pitch
By James M. Dorsey
The battle between Iran and various Gulf state for the
identity of the energy-rich region has spilled onto its soccer pitches. It’s
the Persian Gulf League vs. the Arabian Gulf League.
The struggle erupted when the United Arab Emirates,
alongside Saudi Arabia, the Gulf’s most fervent opponent of political Islam,
recently renamed its premier league as the Arabian Gulf League. The Iranian
football federation, whose own top league, the Persian Gulf League adheres to
the Islamic republic’s position in the war of semantics, responded by blocking
the transfer of Iranian players to UAE clubs and breaking the contracts of
those who had already moved.
The war has stopped Iran’s national team captain Javad Nekounam
from being sold for $2 million to UAE club Al Sharjah. "We had to stop him
from joining the Emirati league. We will ask the president (Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad) to allocate" funds to compensate Mr. Nekounam for his loss,
said Iranian football federation head Ali Kafashian. Quoted by Fars news agency, Mr. Kafashian
said another eight or nine players had also been prevented from moving to the
UAE.
“The Persian Gulf will always be the Persian Gulf. Money is
worthless in comparison to the name of my motherland. I received an offer from
Al Sharjah three months ago and noone forced me to deny it, but I refused to do
so myself. I would never join a team from a league offending the name of the
Persian Gulf,” Mr. Nekounam said on Iranian state television.
The Iranian federation, which has long been micro-managed
from behind the scenes by Mr. Ahmadinejad, made its move three weeks before the
president steps down and is succeeded by president-elect Hassan Rouhani, a
centrist politician and cleric who many hope will seek to improve strained
relations with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states.
The kingdom together with the UAE and Bahrain have accused
Iran of interfering in their domestic affairs by fuelling Shiite anti-government
protests. They are also at loggerheads over Syria with Iran backing embattled
President Bashar al-Assad and the Gulf states supporting rebels opposed to him.
The animosity has fuelled a widening sectarian gap in the region between Sunni
and Shiite Muslims.
The UAE moreover has its own gripes against Iran because of
the Islamic republic’s four decade-old occupation of three potentially oil-rich
islands claimed by the Emirates that are located near key shipping routes at
the entrance to the Strait of Hormuz. The UAE last year declared a boycott of
Iranian players which it did not implement in a bid to pressure Iran to return
the islands and put its controversial nuclear program under international
supervision.
A year earlier, the UAE became with remarks made by its
ambassador to the United States, Yousef al-Otaiba, the first Gulf state to
publicly endorse military force to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear power.
The UAE has in recent years further worked to link more
closely its security to U.S. and European security interests. France inaugurated
in Abu Dhabi its first military base in the region. The base, which comprises
three sites on the banks of the Strait of Hormuz, houses a naval and air base
as well as a training camp, and is home to 500 French troops. Alongside other
smaller Gulf states, the UAE has further agreed to the deployment of U.S.
anti-missile batteries on its territory.
UAE clubs signaled this week that they would comply with the
Iranian boycott in a move that strengthens Emirati resistance to Iranian
policies. "We don't want to be drawn into a political warfare and if it is
true, the club management will take necessary action to avoid any
confrontations," said an official of the Sharjah club that was negotiating
with Mr. Nekounam. Mr. Kafashian said it was negotiating with Ajman to break
the contract of Iran’s Mohammed Reza Khalatbari who had transferred before the
Iranian football federation declared its decision to bar Iranian players from
moving to the UAE.
James M. Dorsey is Senior Fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of
International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University in Singapore,
co-director of the Institute of Fan Culture of the University of Würzburg and
the author of the blog, The
Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer.
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