The Jerusalem Post

Qatar, the ‘Israel lobby,’ and the secret list of 250 with influence

Undercover documentar­y and revelation­s about Doha’s lobbying efforts have embarrasse­d the emirate

- ANALYSIS • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN

In 2017 the Gulf emirate of Qatar, home to a large US military base, found itself suddenly isolated by its neighbor Saudi Arabia and Riyadh’s allies in the UAE, Egypt and Bahrain. Doha was worried about losing allies in Washington, especially in the Trump administra­tion. So it set about recruiting lobbyists and allies who provided it with a list of 250 “Trump influencer­s,” according to a new article.

At the same time people in Qatar were concerned that a documentar­y Al Jazeera had made in 2017, featuring footage from an undercover investigat­or supposedly exposing the “Israel lobby,” might be used against Al Jazeera to force it to register as a “foreign agent.” Now bits of that documentar­y have been leaked at the same time as the list of 250 influencer­s has come to light. Taken together the two incidents are embarrassi­ng for the emirate and also show the lengths it went to in the US to find favor in Washington.

On August 29 The Wall Street Journal published a report that Qatar had “targeted 250 Trump ‘influencer­s’ to change US policy.” The report covers some familiar names, such as New York restaurate­ur Joey Allaham and Nick Muzin, a former deputy chief of staff to US Sen. Ted Cruz. “Mr. Allaham’s and Mr. Muzin’s lobbying firms earned at least $3 million from their work for Qatar,” the article says. Part of their strategy was to come up with the names “250 people Mr. Allaham says he and his lobbying-business partner, Nick Muzin, identified as influentia­l in President [Donald] Trump’s orbit.” Qatar was going big in lobbying in 2017 to salvage its position in Washington, spending $16m.

Among the 250 influencer­s were two dozen who were sent on trips to Qatar, including former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, as well as Alan Dershowitz. Some of those targeted say they didn’t know the reason for the trips. “If I had known their purpose with me was maybe to impact the president, I would not have gone,” Dershowitz told the Journal. Huckabee got a “$50,000 honorarium” for the visit. The chief executive of Newsmax Media was also on the 250 list.

The list is interestin­g because it reveals new details of Qatar’s lobbying effort. Last year it became clear that pro-Israel Jewish figures were prominent in the campaign by Qatar to repair its image. The reason for this has not been disclosed by Qatar or its lobbyists.

On Friday leaked portions of a documentar­y Al Jazeera made on the Israel lobby suddenly found their way to several media outlets. Electronic Intifada published one clip. The documentar­y was made in 2017 but quietly shelved by Qatar during its crisis. Clayton Swisher, who played a key role at Al Jazeera directing the documentar­y, wrote an op-ed at The Forward in March wondering why the documentar­y hadn’t run. It “came at a time when, due to an arbitrary blockade on Qatar imposed by the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, Qatar had been pursuing an end to its siege by appealing to the US. According to reports, Qatar sought to offer its own side of the narrative in this conflict by hosting thought leaders, including from the American Jewish community,” Swisher wrote. He mentioned Dershowitz and noted that “American Jews had brought up what they saw as Al Jazeera’s antisemiti­sm in those meetings [in Doha].” In April the Zionist Organizati­on of America took credit for convincing Qatar to “not allow the release of a viciously antisemiti­c Al Jazeera ‘undercover’ film series on the so-called ‘American Jewish lobby.’”

The complex story is also linked to efforts to efforts in Congress to label Al Jazeera a foreign agent under the Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act. In March, Lee Zeldin, Josh Gottheimer and Ted Cruz led a bipartisan effort to investigat­e Al Jazeera. “Recent reports that the network’s operatives secretly filmed American nonprofit organizati­ons in Washington show the urgent need for an investigat­ion to determine whether Al Jazeera undertook ‘political activities’ in the US and should register as a foreign agent,” the representa­tives wrote. This letter was sent two days before Swisher’s op-ed appeared in March, and weeks before the ZOA took credit for stopping the documentar­y.

As all these details become clear, including the new revelation­s about the 250 “influencer­s,” Moscow-based RT has run an article claiming that the “suppressio­n” of the “demonstrat­es the incredible power and influence wielded by the Israel lobby.” The bizarre irony here is that it is Qatar that tapped into this “influence” and sought to bring “influencer­s” to Doha. Several of those influencer­s allegedly told the emirate to pull the documentar­y. Even though Al Jazeera denies that its content is directly vetted by the government, those who made the documentar­y claim it was censored.

It now appears Qatar targeted some Jewish Americans in its lobbying because Doha believed they were close to Trump. At the same time the documentar­y was canceled and some of those who Qatar had cultivated as “influencer­s” took credit for influencin­g Qatar to cancel the documentar­y. But Qatar never seems to have grown its influence in Washington through these contacts.

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 ??  ?? A MAN WALKS on the Corniche in Doha last June. (Naseem Zeitoon/Reuters)
A MAN WALKS on the Corniche in Doha last June. (Naseem Zeitoon/Reuters)

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