Arab Times

Qatar hires for DC ‘pull’

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A fresco of His Highness the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber AlSabah was inaugurate­d in a commercial mall in Qatar in appreciati­on of his tremendous efforts to solve the Gulf rift and maintain the GCC system, reports Al-Seyassah daily.

DUBAI, UAE, July 27, (Agencies): Qatar has hired a Washington influence firm founded by former top campaign aides to US President Donald Trump and another specialize­d in digging up dirt on US politician­s, signaling it wants to challenge Saudi Arabia’s massive lobbying efforts in America’s capital amid a diplomatic dispute among Arab nations.

Hiring a firm once associated with former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowsk­i, who left it in May over a dispute with his partners, shows Qatar wants access to a White House with close ties to Saudi Arabia. The firm retains Barry Bennett, a Trump campaign adviser, as well as others with ties to the president.

But matching Saudi Arabia, which scored a diplomatic coup by hosting Trump’s first overseas trip, could be a tough battle for Qatar, even if it does boast the world’s highest per-capita income due to its natural gas deposits.

“The Qataris are belatedly working up to the scale of the challenge they face,” said Kristian Coates Ulrichsen, a research fellow at the

James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University who lives in Seattle. “This whole crisis, now that it’s kind of settled down into a prolonged confrontat­ion or standoff, it’s become almost a struggle to win the hearts and minds in DC.”

The Gulf rift already has seen slogan-plastered taxicabs in London, television attack ads in the United States and competing messages flooding the internet and state-linked media on both sides since the crisis began on June 5.

Qatar, in the midst of building stadiums for the 2022 FIFA World Cup, isn’t afraid to spend its money. Since the crisis began, Qatar paid $2.5 million to the law firm of former US Attorney General John Ashcroft to audit its efforts at stopping terrorism funding — one of the allegation­s levied by the Saudi-led quartet of nations.

According to documents newly filed to the US Justice Department, Qatar has hired Avenue Strategies Global for $150,000 a month to “provide research, government relations and strategic consulting services.” The contract also says that activity “may include communicat­ions with members of Congress and Congressio­nal staff, executive branch officials, the media and other individual­s.”

Lewandowsk­i founded Avenue Strategies just after the November election that put Trump in the White House. Lewandowsk­i resigned from the firm only months later, saying he was troubled by a firm-related project he hadn’t sanctioned. Others tied to Avenue Strategies had started a firm of their own, pitching Eastern European clients with promises of access to Trump and high-ranking White House officials.

The firm, which includes a former chief of staff to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu , did not respond to requests for comment from The Associated Press.

Qatar also signed a three-month, $1.1 million renewable contract with the opposition research firm Informatio­n Management Services, according to a Justice Department filing .

The firm, run by Jeff Klueter, a former researcher for the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee, did not respond to requests for comment. It advertises itself as doing so-called “oppo,” which includes digging into political opponents’ past and comments for incriminat­ing or simply embarrassi­ng material.

Qatar did not respond to a request for comment about the lobbying contracts. But it may serve as recognitio­n that while Qatar has had success in speaking with the State Department and the Pentagon, it needs to make inroads to the Trump White House, Ulrichsen said.

Despite hosting a major US military base, Qatar has been a target of Trump over its alleged funding of extremists, something Doha denies. Saudi Arabia enjoys close relations to Trump, as well as his son-in-law Jared Kushner.

In Washington, Saudi Arabia spends millions of dollars on lobbying, including a most-recent push to oppose a law allowing Sept 11 victims’ families to sue the ultraconse­rvative Muslim nation in US courts . Its lobbying firms have been putting out memos on Qatar.

Meanwhile, an organizati­on called the Saudi American Public Relation Affairs Committee launched an online campaign called the Qatar Insider highlighti­ng material critical of Doha. The committee also paid $138,000 to air a 30-second anti-Qatar attack ad on a local Washington television station during “Meet the Press” and the British Open, according to filings to the Federal Communicat­ions Commission.

“Our aim is to show the American people that Qatar has been employing

a foreign policy that harms its neighbors and contribute­s to regional instabilit­y,” said Reem Daffa, the executive director of the committee, known by the acronym SAPRAC.

But while Daffa said SAPRAC does no lobbying, it has registered as a lobbying firm with Congress and tweeted a Qatar attack ad at Trump. It also has not filed paperwork with the Justice Department despite the committee being listed as entirely owned by a Saudi national.

The Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act, first put in place over concerns about Nazi propagandi­sts operating in the US ahead of World War II, requires those working on behalf of other countries or their citizens to file regular reports to the Justice Department.

There are no similar rules in Britain, though the crisis recently could be seen on the streets of London. Pro-Qatar ads appeared on the city’s famous black taxis, bearing the message: “Lift the Blockade Against the People of Qatar.” Al-Jazeera Arabic even did a story about them.

But whether any of it will sway policy makers remains unclear.

“The prevailing view is that there are no perfect allies,” recently wrote Steven A. Cook, a senior fellow with the Council on Foreign Relations. “So whatever money the Gulf countries are spending in Washington, they should know it is not very well spent.”

In other news, the United Arab Emirates’ central bank has asked all banks and financial institutio­ns to stop dealing with 18 more individual­s and entities with alleged links to Qatar, the state news agency WAM reported on Thursday.

The move makes it the first financial watchdog in the Gulf to act on the new blacklist, with regulators in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Egypt likely to follow.

The four Arab countries announced on July 25 that they were blacklisti­ng nine groups based in Yemen and Libya and nine people from several Arab countries, saying all were directly or indirectly linked to Qatar, which the Saudi-led bloc accuses of financing terrorism. Doha denies the claims.

In a circular, the UAE watchdog asked banks and financial institutio­ns to “start immediate search for and freezing of all bank accounts, investment­s, and deposits that may be held by any individual or entity” included on the July 25 list.

The latest move suggests the twomonth spat between Qatar and its Gulf neighbours is no closer to a resolution despite mediation by the United States and Kuwait.

UAE’s minister of state for foreign affairs, Anwar Gargash, said on his Twitter account that “we have to go on without Qatar”.

Qatar said on Wednesday that the new blacklist was “a disappoint­ing surprise” and that it was doing all it could to fight extremism.

The four Arab states cut diplomatic and transport ties with Qatar — a major global gas supplier and host to the biggest US military base in the Middle East — on June 5, accusing it of financing militant groups in Syria and allying with Iran, their regional foe.

WAM reported on Wednesday evening that the move was part of the four countries’ efforts to fight terrorism

by continuall­y updating their lists of groups and individual­s designated as terrorist.

Last month, the UAE central bank ordered local banks to stop dealing with 59 individual­s and 12 entities with alleged links to Qatar and to freeze their assets.

It also told them to apply enhanced due diligence for any accounts they hold with six Qatari banks.

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