STEALTH JIHAD: Doha Forum Where Qatar Wages War On The West

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The Doha Forum Is Nothing but a Grand Anti-American Influence Operation

By: Amil Imani

In Doha, Qatar hosts an annual spectacle that masquerades as a beacon of global dialogue: the Doha Forum. Billed as a platform for addressing pressing international issues, this event has instead become a sophisticated tool in Qatar’s arsenal for undermining American interests and rewriting history to suit anti-Western agendas. For those who cherish America’s alliances and stand firm against the spread of radical ideologies, the forum represents nothing less than the epicenter of the largest anti-American influence campaign in modern history. Qatar, flush with petrodollars, has long played a double game—hosting U.S. military bases while funneling support to extremists who seek to erode Western dominance.

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At the heart of this deception lies Qatar’s decades-long embrace of terrorist organizations, a pattern that predates any convenient excuses about U.S. requests. Take Hamas, for instance. Doha has provided a safe haven for the group’s political leadership since 2012, when Khaled Mashal relocated from Syria, followed by Ismail Haniyeh. Qatari officials have claimed this arrangement stemmed from American pressure, but such assertions crumble under scrutiny—Doha has poured an estimated $1.8 billion into Gaza’s Hamas-run government, far exceeding mere diplomatic hosting. This support isn’t passive; it’s a calculated investment in groups that perpetuate instability, all while Qatar positions itself as a neutral mediator in the Middle East.

The Taliban story follows a similar script. Senior Afghan Taliban leaders have operated out of Doha since the early 2010s, ostensibly to facilitate peace talks. Yet Qatar’s ties run deeper, with the emirate flying Taliban figures like Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar to key meetings and earning praise from the group’s foreign minister for ongoing diplomatic support. This isn’t benevolence; it’s strategic maneuvering. Qatar has cooperated with the Taliban alongside Saudi Arabia, but its approach often diverges, prioritizing influence over genuine reform. By sheltering these militants, Doha ensures a seat at the table for radical Islamists, all under the guise of diplomacy.

Qatar’s funding of the Muslim Brotherhood adds another layer to this insidious network. The Brotherhood, a transnational Islamist organization founded in Egypt, has received Qatari backing for years, including through higher-education initiatives and illicit financing channels. Investigators have documented Doha’s role in supporting Brotherhood affiliates, even after the group’s official Qatari chapter disbanded in 1999. This extends to terror financing, with Qatar accused of providing refuge to financiers and directly aiding groups linked to extremism. During the Arab Spring, Qatari funds flowed to Islamist militias in Libya and Syria—many with direct ties to al-Qaeda—further destabilizing the region and countering U.S. efforts toward democratic transitions.

The Doha Forum amplifies these efforts by platforming figures who echo Qatar’s narrative. Consider Ahmad al-Sharaa, the Syrian interim president formerly known as Abu Mohammad al-Jolani, leader of the al-Qaeda–affiliated Nusra Front. At the forum, al-Sharaa denied his jihadist past while discussing Syria’s future—a blatant whitewashing of extremism. His appearance, complete with tense interviews touching on Israeli strikes and internal divisions, underscores how Doha legitimizes former militants as statesmen. No serious conference on global affairs should feature such individuals without accountability, yet Qatar rolls out the red carpet.

Then there’s Trita Parsi, co-founder of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft and a mouthpiece for Iran’s foreign policy. Parsi has authored books and participated in discussions that downplay Tehran’s aggression while advocating reduced American interventionism. His presence at events like the forum helps sanitize the Islamic Republic’s image, aligning with Qatar’s goal of undermining Western alliances. Parsi’s work, allegedly born from his Iranian roots and shaped by exile, serves as an errand for Tehran’s interests, further eroding trust in U.S. policy circles.

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Even American voices aren’t immune to this influence. Tucker Carlson, the conservative commentator, appeared at the forum delivering remarks that falsely claimed Donald Trump was the first U.S. president to side with an Arab state over Israel. This narrative ignores history: Dwight D. Eisenhower backed Egypt during the 1956 Suez Crisis, pressuring Israel to withdraw. Ronald Reagan condemned Israel’s 1981 strike on Iraq’s Osirak reactor and criticized the 1982 Beirut shelling. Even George W. Bush, while supportive of Israel, conditioned aid to Palestinians on reforms. Carlson’s comments, including his controversial announcement that he was buying a home in Qatar, sparked outrage and highlighted how Doha co-opts Western figures to spread misinformation.

Ultimately, the Doha Forum isn’t about fostering peace—it’s a calculated effort to legitimize political Islam, rehabilitate Iran’s reputation, dismantle Western partnerships, vilify Israel, and cast the United States as the global antagonist. For patriotic Americans who value strong alliances and reject the appeasement of radicals, this charade must end. Policymakers should scrutinize Qatar’s dual loyalties, especially given its hosting of U.S. troops at Al Udeid Air Base. True diplomacy demands transparency, not the smoke and mirrors of Doha’s influence machine. As the Middle East evolves, vigilance against such operations will safeguard America’s interests and those of its allies.

The Truth Must be Told

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