The Free Press
Honestly with Bari Weiss
How Qatar Bought America
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How Qatar Bought America
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In the past few weeks, Qatar has been all over the news with flashy headlines of a $400 million luxury jet that the country gifted to President Donald Trump. It symbolized their opulence and eagerness to please the U.S.

But 40 years ago, Qatar was a country with a gross domestic product (GDP) of a few billion dollars. Since the 19th century, it has been run by the Al Thani family, which can trace its roots in the region back thousands of years.

Qatar was long considered a backwater. The main industries were fishing and pearls. It was impoverished for the vast majority of its history. Its royal family was dwarfed by rivals in Saudi Arabia.

Then everything changed. It turned out that the largest liquified natural gas field was sitting just off the coast of Qatar. And with the help of American energy giants like ExxonMobil, Qatar began exporting LNG in 1997.

In a few decades, Qatar’s GDP grew exponentially. Today, it’s over $200 billion. Qatar hosts the main air base for American forces in the Middle East. It hosted the World Cup in 2022. And it’s embarking on a series of business and military deals with the U.S.—earmarked at $1.2 trillion.

There are a lot of petro-states in the region. Some, like Saudi Arabia, exceed Qatar’s wealth by hundreds of billions. But what Qatar has chosen to do with its money—morality aside—is farsighted. Qatar has chosen to focus a huge amount of money and resources on influence.

In the past 15 years, Qatar has developed a sophisticated apparatus to embed itself into American society in a way that would shock most Americans. They’ve done it by investing in our politicians, universities, newsrooms, think tanks, lobbying firms, and corporations—all on an unprecedented scale.

In all, the tiny Gulf nation has spent almost $100 billion to establish this influence.

So what’s the problem? Well, Qatar’s push to buy influence has made their connection to the Muslim Brotherhood ever more alarming and apparent.

Frannie Block and Jay Solomon published a massive investigative report on Qatar’s seismic influence strategy for The Free Press. It’s called “How Qatar Bought America.”

Today on Honestly, I ask Jay and Frannie how Qatar built this ecosystem, what they want in return, and what it has already gotten them.

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Al's avatar

We are letting Qatar bribe there way to ruin us from within. A small extreme country with an Islamist agenda that consistently supports terror (from al Qaeda to Hamas) is poisoning us from within with peanuts (ultimately negligent amounts of money but well targeted...). A country with an economy smaller than Oklahoma's (they are rich per capita, but so what...) has a propaganda and bribing machine focused on our schools, universities, media and, yes, government. We have to demand from our representatives to boycott Qatar (as their neighbors have done, though we ruined that), get our troops out of there (transfer Al Udaid to the UAE), until they completely change their ways (which I do not believe will happen, though they will pretend to). We should boycott any event sponsored by Qatar, any sports team with their name on the shirt and any organization that accepts their money. This is self-defense.

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Margaret's avatar

This was an amazing interview! My mind is officially blown! And not in a good way...

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