http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/qatars-support-for-islamists-muddles-its-reputation-as-neutral-broker-in-mideast/2012/11/28/a9f8183a-f92e-11e1-8398-0327ab83ab91_story.html?wpisrc=nl_headlines


Qatar’s support for Islamists muddles its reputation as neutral broker in 
Mideast
 By Colum Lynch, Thursday, November 29, 3:18 AM 
UNITED NATIONS — For years, the tiny oil sheikdom of Qatar has been a reliable 
U.S. partner in the Middle East — as a host to the largest American military 
base in the region and as a diplomatic bulwark against Iran. It has backed the 
fall of autocratic rulers in Libya and Syria.

Two years after the start of the Arab Spring, however, Qatar’s carefully 
cultivated reputation as a U.S. partner — and as a neutral broker in the region 
— is increasingly muddled. With billions of dollars in natural gas and oil 
revenue, it is bankrolling a new generation of Islamists across the Middle 
East, raising questions about its vision for the region and whether some of its 
policies are in direct conflict with U.S. interests.




 
Those questions are complicated by the country’s apparent eagerness to retain 
influence in the West. It is increasingly underwriting Qatari outposts of 
Western universities and think tanks, including Georgetown University and the 
Brookings Institution, to help inform Western views about the region’s future 
and Qatar’s role in it.

Among some observers, the overarching questions about Qatar, as one senior Arab 
diplomat put it, is this: What, exactly, does it represent?

“I think that is part of the conundrum that is Qatar,” said the diplomat, who 
spoke on the condition of anonymity but whose government maintains close ties 
with the Persian Gulf country.

Officials at the Qatari Embassy in Washington and the Qatari mission to the 
United Nations did not make themselves available for interviews for this 
article.

In the past, Qatari officials have taken pride in their country’s growing role 
on the world stage.

Since deposing his father in a bloodless coup in 1995, the country’s emir, 
Sheik Hamad Bin Khalifa al-Thani, has transformed its capital, Doha, from a 
dusty Persian Gulf backwater into the undisputed intellectual and diplomatic 
capital of the Middle East. Slightly smaller than Connecticut and with a 
population of about 2 million, the country is home to now-global institutions, 
including the television network al-Jazeera.

Among other benefits, analysts say, Qatar’s growing clout and its alliance with 
the United States have won it diplomatic leeway from Washington.

When Turkey’s prime minister announced plans to visit the Gaza Strip recently, 
American officials made clear they opposed any engagement with Hamas, the 
Palestinian group that controls the strip. When Qatar’s emir visited Gaza last 
month, pledging hundreds of millions in reconstruction aid, the State 
Department was understanding.

“The Qataris have described this as a humanitarian mission,” spokeswoman 
Victoria Nuland said. “We share Qatar’s deep concern for the welfare of the 
Palestinian people, including those residing in Gaza.”

Mediation nation 

Qatar has long sought to cultivate a reputation as a country interested in 
serving the public good. As part of that effort, the country’s foreign 
minister, Sheik Hamad Bin Jasim al-Thani, has combined deep pockets, extensive 
business investments and a vast conference center in Doha into a high-charged 
mediation juggernaut.


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