Obama speaks to Bahrain's king, urges restraint

By Ross ColvinPosted 2011/02/18 at 9:45 pm EST

WASHINGTON, Feb. 18, 2011 (Reuters) — President Barack Obama spoke with 
Bahrain's king on Friday night, urging restraint after the kingdom's security 
forces ignored Washington's earlier call for calm and opened fire on protesters 
demanding reforms.
President Barack Obama is pictured during a news conference in the Eisenhower 
Executive Office Building in Washington in this February 4, 2011 file photo. 
REUTERS/Jim Young
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Amid unrest across much of the Middle East, U.S. officials have voiced concern 
about violence in the island nation in talks with the government of Bahrain, 
which hosts a big U.S. military base and borders Saudi Arabia, the world's 
largest oil exporter.

The White House said in a statement that Obama, in speaking with King Hamad bin 
Isa Al-Khalifa, condemned violence and said Bahrain's stability depended on 
respect for the rights of its people.

Earlier on Friday, Obama said he was deeply concerned by reports of violence in 
Bahrain, Libya and Yemen. "The United States condemns the use of violence by 
governments against peaceful protesters in those countries, and wherever else 
it may occur," Obama said in a statement.

Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy said he had asked the State Department to 
probe whether Bahrain had broken a U.S. law he wrote that prohibits aid to 
foreign security forces that violate human rights. The United States provided 
around $20 million in military aid to Bahrain in 2010.

Bahraini security forces shot at protesters in the capital, Manama, on Friday, 
wounding at least 60 people, a day after police swept away a protest camp in 
the city, killing four people and wounding more than 230.

In Libya, soldiers sought to crush unrest. In Yemen, at least four protesters 
were killed in clashes between security forces and government loyalists and 
crowds demanding an end to President Ali Abdullah Saleh's 32-year rule.

Bahrain's crackdown on protesters posed a new dilemma for the Obama 
administration after a popular uprising in Egypt ousted U.S. ally President 
Hosni Mubarak a week ago.

A U.S. national security official said Bahrain security forces appeared to be 
using rubber bullets and live ammunition fired from, but not limited to, 
shotguns.

'WANT TO AVOID'

"This (violence) is exactly what the administration and the U.S. want to 
avoid," said Robert Danin, a Middle East expert at the Council on Foreign 
Relations think tank.

"In the case of Egypt, the goal was to see managed change, (an) orderly 
transition. But the number-one thing was to ensure that this be done without 
violence. The minute that there's violence it is very hard to reconcile support 
for your ally and the aspirations of the demonstrators."

U.S. national security and intelligence agencies expect Bahrain's government to 
ride out the unrest and that security forces will eventually succeed in 
containing the protests, a senior U.S. official familiar with government 
reporting and analysis on Bahrain told Reuters.

The United States views Bahrain, home to the U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet, as a 
strategic ally that straddles oil supply lines in the Gulf. As in the case of 
Egypt and elsewhere in the region, it must balance strategic interests with its 
support for protesters' demands for economic and political reforms.

Obama's response may be colored by the U.S. view of Bahrain as one of the more 
progressive Arab states. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told Bahrain civil 
society activists during a visit in December their government was moving more 
quickly than many others in the region to implement democratic change.

Several 2009 cables from the U.S. Embassy in Manama, made available to Reuters, 
characterized King Hamad as an enlightened and deeply pro-American ruler who, 
since assuming the throne in 1999, had fostered reconciliation with the Shi'ite 
Muslim majority and had undertaken serious political and economic reforms.

"The U.S. is in a rather embarrassing position, because officials have tended 
to give King Hamad far more credit than they should have for political 
reforms," said Michele Dunne, a Middle East expert at the Carnegie Endowment 
for International Peace.

The State Department issued a travel warning on Friday for Bahrain, noting 
clashes between protesters and demonstrators. "Spontaneous demonstrations and 
violence are expected throughout the next several days," the department said, 
urging U.S. citizens to defer nonessential travel to the country.

Middle East experts said the Obama administration had little leverage over 
Bahrain's Sunni Muslim monarchy.

Admiral Mike Mullen, the top U.S. military officer, may be reprising the role 
he played in the Egypt uprising by keeping channels open to the Bahraini 
military, they said.

"The options to bring pressure seem extremely limited. Despite the close 
alliance, Bahrain has been defiant of the United States over the years," said 
Simon Henderson, a Gulf expert at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

(Additional reporting by Andrew Quinn, Susan Cornwell, Mark Hosenball, Tom 
Ferraro and Steve Holland in Washington and Matt Spetalnick aboard Air Force 
One; Editing by John O'Callaghan, Eric Walsh and Peter Cooney)



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