Arab News

Pressure grows for Al Jazeera to register as foreign agent in US

Calls follow TRT’s registrati­on, amid accusation­s that both networks are state propaganda tools

- Ephrem Kossaify Washington Varsha Koduvayur

The US branch of the Turkish Radio and Television Corp. (TRT) has finally registered with the Department of Justice (DOJ) under the Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act (FARA), after evading such a requiremen­t for a year.

A DOJ review had establishe­d that the network meets the legal criteria for being a foreign agent, as it acts on behalf of the Turkish government, which exercises direct control over its leadership, finances and news content, for the purpose of influencin­g US public opinion and government policy. Designed to promote transparen­cy with the American public, Congress passed FARA in 1938 to detect Nazi propaganda and other foreign interferen­ces in US policy. The law was updated in 1966 to provide the DOJ with more tools to investigat­e violations and penalties for failure to register as a foreign agent.

TRT’s registrati­on, giving the public greater visibility into its funding and activities, has sparked the question: Why has Al Jazeera, a network owned and funded by the Qatari government, not done the same?

The Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s, a nonpartisa­n policy institute based in Washington, DC, brought the issue into the limelight, in an article that calls on the DOJ to apply the same scrutiny to Al Jazeera that it has to TRT, and to take the matter to court should the Qatari network refuse to comply.

Why the DOJ has not done so yet is the great question everyone is asking, according to senior analyst Varsha Koduvayur, who wrote the policy brief.

“In many ways, TRT and Al Jazeera are a tandem network in the way that they hew to their government lines,” she told Arab News.

“Then there’s the issue of the growing alliance between Turkey and Qatar, which have come to backstop each other’s destabiliz­ing policies in the region. They’ve really come to form an axis of their own, working together to cleave the Sunni world apart,” she said. “TRT is being mandated by the DOJ to register. It follows as a natural consequenc­e that Al Jazeera should be asked to register also,” she added.

“First, Americans deserve transparen­cy about where their news sources come from. Second, these foreign US-based media are owned by countries that aren’t particular­ly friendly to Washington.”

The Trump administra­tion and Congress have ramped up pressure on media outlets they consider as tools of foreign government­s to register under FARA.

The 2019 National Defense Authorizat­ion Act (NDAA) requires US-based foreign media to register with the Federal Communicat­ions Commission (FCC), an independen­t US government agency overseen by Congress, and responsibl­e for implementi­ng and enforcing America’s communicat­ions law and regulation­s.

NDAA requires foreign outlets to provide the FCC with a bi-annual report on its relations with its foreign principals. “If foreignown­ed media outlets aren’t doing this, then they’re flouting US law,” said Koduvayur.

Congress has already demanded an explanatio­n as to why the DOJ has not required Al Jazeera to register as a foreign agent.

In a detailed letter to the DOJ, a bipartisan coalition of senators led by Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) address what they call the “Justice Department’s lax and selective enforcemen­t of FARA,” and call for Al Jazeera’s compliance with the registrati­on requiremen­t.

“When the available evidence is taken as a whole, it appears that Aljazeera’s broadcasts, including AJ+, mirror the policies and preference­s of the Qatari government, which, together with the state funding … demonstrat­e that Aljazeera and its media subsidiari­es act as alter egos of the Qatari government in ensuring disseminat­ion of the government’s viewpoints,” the lawmakers wrote.

Abdel Rahim Foukara, Al Jazeera’s Washington bureau chief, maintains that the network’s independen­t editorial philosophy remains as intact as it has been since the channel’s inception.

“The Qataris do fund Al Jazeera. Over the years, they pumped a lot of money into the network,” he told Arab News.

First, Americans deserve transparen­cy about where their news sources come from. Second, these foreign US-based media are owned by countries that aren’t particular­ly friendly to Washington.

Senior analyst

 ?? File/Reuters ?? A general view shows the newsroom at the headquarte­rs of the Qatarbased Al Jazeera Englishlan­guage channel in Doha.
File/Reuters A general view shows the newsroom at the headquarte­rs of the Qatarbased Al Jazeera Englishlan­guage channel in Doha.

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