The Sentinel-Record

While Trump praises Qatar, education officials seek scrutiny

- COLLIN BINKLEY

When President Donald Trump welcomed the emir of Qatar to Washington with a lavish Treasury Department dinner, the guest list included the president of Georgetown University, one of six U.S. schools that operate branch campuses in the tiny Persian Gulf nation.

But even as Trump stood before his guests and praised Qatar for its large investment­s in the United States, his Education Department was quietly investigat­ing Georgetown and three other universiti­es — Texas A&M, Cornell and Rutgers — over their funding from Qatar, the largest foreign donor to U.S. schools.

The department alleges the schools failed to tell federal officials about certain gifts and contracts from foreign sources, as federal law requires, according to letters obtained by The Associated Press.

Investigat­ors are ordering the schools to provide years of informatio­n about their foreign revenue, singling out specific nations of interest at each school. Just two countries appear in all four letters: China, whose academic ties have become a source of tension amid its trade war with America, and Qatar, an oilrich nation that has struggled to shake accusation­s that it finances terrorism.

The department did not explain its interest in Qatar and declined to comment for this story. But in a July 3 letter to the American Council on Education, which represents dozens of university presidents, the department noted that its broader interest is related to “security, academic freedom and other concerns associated with foreign funding.”

Education officials began their crackdown after a congressio­nal panel in February said the department was failing to oversee foreign funding to U.S. schools. That panel focused solely on China, saying Beijing’s gifts aimed to buy influence in U.S. classrooms. It did not mention Qatar.

Qatar’s funding of U.S. schools never came up in public interactio­ns between Trump and Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani this week. The topic of education arose only once, when the emir said both countries are working to create economies “with an emphasis of education — on education, openness, and opportunit­y for all.”

Asked for comment about the investigat­ion, Georgetown said it “regularly reports payments from the Qatar Foundation.”

Meghan Dubyak, a Georgetown spokeswoma­n, said the school’s president, John DeGioia, attended the emir’s dinner “because of Georgetown’s campus in Qatar, which has helped educate more than 400 students in internatio­nal affairs while maintainin­g our unwavering commitment to academic freedom, religious freedom, and inclusion and non-discrimina­tion.”

Despite its size, Qatar has funneled more money to U.S. schools than any other nation, according to an AP analysis of federal education data. Over the past decade, it gave more than $1.4 billion to 28 schools, while the No. 2 contributo­r, England, gave around $900 million.

Nearly 98% of Qatar’s support has gone to just six U.S. schools: Texas A&M, Georgetown, Cornell, Carnegie Mellon, Northweste­rn and Virginia Commonweal­th. Each school has a campus in Qatar, with operating costs covered by the Qatar Foundation, a nonprofit group led by the country’s royal family.

VCU, for example, receives about $40 million a year to run its branch at Education City, a cluster of campuses near the capital city Doha, according to a contract provided by the school.

The American outposts have operated for more than a decade with relatively little controvers­y. VCU was the first to open a Qatar campus, in 1998, while Northweste­rn was the latest, in 2008. Each branch focuses on a different academic area, from engineerin­g to fine arts. They aim to teach students from Qatar and the Middle East. The American Associatio­n of University Professors says it has fielded no complaints about funding from Qatar, as it sometimes does over China’s support.

John Carberry, a spokesman for Cornell, said the school’s branch has trained hundreds of physicians from the Middle East and Asia, “enabling the ongoing transforma­tion of patient care, biomedical research and quality of life in the region and around the world.” He said Cornell is cooperatin­g with investigat­ors and has consistent­ly disclosed its funding in public tax filings.

A statement from Rutgers said the school’s “failure to report was a misunderst­anding on the part of the university” and that officials are working to come into compliance. A spokeswoma­n would not elaborate.

The Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s, a Washington think tank, called Tuesday for Trump to make the emir “come clean” about Qatar’s gifts to U.S. schools. The group said the Qatar Foundation is “renowned for hosting virulently extremist preachers at its flashy mosque in Qatar’s Education City, located near the satellite campuses of American universiti­es.”

“President Trump should tell the emir that America welcomes genuine investment­s in our education system, but not influence peddling,” the group wrote.

A message seeking comment was left with the Qatar Foundation.

Two other groups, the Zachor Legal Institute and Judicial Watch, have pushed Texas A&M to divulge more details about its funding from Qatar. The groups have suggested that the Qatar Foundation promotes extremist and anti-Israel ideas on U.S. campuses.

Last year, lawyers for the Qatar Foundation filed a lawsuit in Texas seeking to block Texas A&M from releasing records about the country’s donations, arguing that they amount to “trade secrets” and could give competitor­s an unfair advantage. The Zachor Legal Institute is opposing the request, which is pending in court.

Trump was initially a critic of Qatar and in 2017 called it a “funder of terrorism at a very high level,” but he appears to have warmed to the country. On Monday, he called it a “great ally” and said its emir is a “great friend.”

Trump also praised Qatar for spending $8 billion to improve U.S. military bases in the nation. During a visit from the emir last year, Trump applauded Qatar for making strides to fight terrorism.

But Saudi Arabia and other neighbors have continued a blockade of Qatar that was imposed in 2017 over a range of concerns, including Qatar’s ties to Iran and allegation­s that it has backed terrorist organizati­ons such as al-Qaida and the Islamic State group. Qatar denies the accusation­s, and on Monday the emir reiterated his commitment to oppose terrorism.

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