The Jerusalem Post

Qatar’s new tactic is to control the world of academia

- • By NOAH PHILLIPS

The Qatari regime, long known for its robust sponsorshi­p of terrorism and devaluatio­n of human rights, has employed a new tactic to exert foreign influence and evade internatio­nal condemnati­on: controllin­g the world of academia.

For years, Qatar’s lavish spending on foreign lobbyists – particular­ly in the United States, where lobbying plays an integral role in the legislativ­e process – has constitute­d the bulk of the country’s attempts to wield influence in the world’s most powerful market. The small Gulf nation with not 315,000 citizens regularly doles out tens of millions on Beltway-insider lobbying firms intended to polish Qatar’s image in the eyes of lawmakers and the American populace. In 2017, Qatar spent $16.3 million on Washington lobbyists.

Qatar’s relentless US lobbying offensive has yielded favorable results. Despite its staunch opposition to America’s primary allies in the Middle East (Saudi Arabia, Israel and the United Arab Emirates), regular rhetorical support of Iran and monetary funding of elements of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, Hamas, al-Qaeda and ISIS, Qatar has nonetheles­s maintained its official designatio­n as a US ally in the region even as it upholds values in stark contrast to ours.

But recently, Qatar’s lobbying stratagem has expanded from the Hill, as the country looks to cast a much wider net with much more permanent consequenc­es for foreign relations. Qatar now allocates billions of dollars toward the protection of its image in the American classroom, sponsoring academic curricula and major academic institutio­ns in return for favorable coverage in these settings. Since 2012, according to the Department of Education, Qatar has spent nearly $1.5 billion on infiltrati­ng American universiti­es and academic discourse.

From 2011 to 2016, Qatar donated over $330m. to Georgetown University, an astronomic­al amount to a single university. The university has strategic value to Qatar, given Georgetown’s close proximity to the nation’s capital and regular production of diplomats and legislator­s through its renowned School of Foreign Service. Georgetown faculty are regularly credited as experts in the media, and stifling their ability to condemn Qatar for wrongdoing is a significan­t gain for the Gulf state. Per the Daily Caller News Foundation, “The vast majority of funds from Qatar were contracts, the Education Department data shows, requiring Georgetown to do something in return for the money, unlike gifts.”

Qatar has also targeted the likes of

Northweste­rn University, disbursing over $277m. to the university from 2011 to 2016. The reason likely lies with Northweste­rn’s Medill School of Journalism’s reputation as the top place for budding journalist­s and members of the press to develop and hone their abilities before entering the profession­al world. Instilling a pro-Qatari philosophy into the minds of the future writers who would be most likely to expose Qatar for its innumerabl­e transgress­ions is a strategic play by the Gulf nation.

Both Georgetown and Northweste­rn have establishe­d campuses in Doha, Qatar’s capital, in partnershi­p with the Qatar Foundation, an organizati­on solely focused on showing the West the prosperous, “humane” side of the Qatari regime. The Qatar Foundation similarly sponsored a headquarte­rs for the Brookings Institutio­n in Doha for the express purpose of showcasing a “bright image of Qatar in the internatio­nal media, especially the American one,” per Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The foundation also sponsors campuses of Cornell, Virginia Commonweal­th University, Texas A&M, University College London and Carnegie Mellon. More than 8,000 students study annually at Qatar’s “Education City.”

Other major recipients of Qatari wealth include the University of Michigan, Harvard, Purdue, Arizona State, and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. All of the aforementi­oned universiti­es have forged strong profession­al and academic connection­s in Qatar.

In addition to maintainin­g a physical presence in Qatar, certain ideals of the regime are seeping into the forefront of discourse on college campuses more than ever. The proliferat­ion of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement to bolster the Palestinia­n narrative has taken off at major universiti­es, a campaign closely in step with Qatari principles. Likewise, a tolerance for antisemiti­c bigotry on campus is reflective of intrinsica­lly Qatari behavior.

The serious concerns raised by foreign donations of massive amounts of wealth are apparent, yet by and large ignored by US academic institutio­ns. The injection of capital into the United States academic setting not only endangers the independen­ce of private research institutio­ns, but trickles upward as graduates reach high places, directly impacting the American stance on global issues such as terrorism and Israel.

The writer specialize­s in Israeli and Middle Eastern affairs. He has been published in the Daily Wire, Daily Caller, Washington Examiner, Jewish News Syndicate, and more. Follow Noah on Twitter @noahaphill­i

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel