How Qatar is funding the rise of
Islamist extremists
The fabulously wealthy Gulf state, which owns an array of London landmarks and claims to be one of our best friends
in the Middle East , is a prime sponsor of
violent Islamists
By David
Blair and Richard Spencer 10:00PM BST 20 Sep 2014 The Telegraph / http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/qatar/11110931/How-Qatar-is-funding-the-rise-of-Islamist-extremists.html
Few
outsiders have noticed, but radical Islamists now control Libya 's capital. These militias
stormed Tripoli
last month, forcing the official government to flee and hastening the country's
collapse into a failed state.
Moreover,
the new overlords of Tripoli are allies of Ansar
al-Sharia, a brutal jihadist movement suspected of killing America 's then ambassador to Libya ,
Christopher Stevens, and of trying to murder his British counterpart, Sir
Dominic Asquith.
Barely
three years after Britain
helped to free Libya
from Col Gaddafi's tyranny, anti-Western radicals hold sway. How could Britain 's goal of a stable and friendly Libya have been
thwarted so completely?
Step
forward a fabulously wealthy Gulf state that owns an array of London
landmarks and claims to be one of our best friends in the Middle
East .
Western
officials have tracked the Qatari arms flights as they land in the city of Misrata , about 100 miles east of Tripoli , where the Islamist militias have
their stronghold. Even after the fall of the capital and the removal of Libya 's government, Qatar is "still flying in
weapons straight to Misrata airport", said a senior Western official.
So it is
that Qatar buys London property while working against British interests in
Libya
and arming friends of the jihadists who tried to kill one of our ambassadors. A
state that partly owns 1 Hyde Park, London 's
most expensive apartment block, and the Shard, the city's tallest building, is
working with people who would gladly destroy Western society.
The
remarkable truth is that few in the Middle East
would be shocked. From Hamas in the Gaza Strip to radical armed movements in Syria , Qatar 's status as a prime sponsor
of violent Islamists, including groups linked to al-Qaeda, is clear to
diplomats and experts.
Take Syria , where Qatar has been sponsoring the
rebellion against Bashar al-Assad's regime. In itself, that policy places Qatar alongside
the leading Western powers and much of the Arab world.
But Qatar has deliberately
channelled guns and cash towards Islamist rebels, notably a group styling
itself Ahrar al-Sham, or "Free Men of Syria". Only last week, Khalid
al-Attiyah, the Qatari foreign minister, praised this movement as
"purely" Syrian.
He added
that its fighters had suffered heavy losses while combating the Islamic State
of Iraq and the Levant (Isil), the group
behind the murder of David Haines, the British aid worker, and which is holding
John Cantlie and Alan Henning hostage.
Far from
being a force for moderation, Ahrar al-Sham played a key role in transforming
the anti-Assad revolt into an Islamist uprising. Its men fought alongside
Jabhat al-Nusra, an al-Qaeda affiliate, during the battle for Aleppo and they were accused of at least one
sectarian massacre.
Instead of
fighting Isil, Ahrar al-Sham helped the jihadists to run Raqqa, the town in
eastern Syria
that is now the capital of the self-proclaimed "Caliphate". This
cooperation with Isil happened for some months until the two groups fell out
last year.
Last
December, the US Treasury designated a Qatari academic and businessman, Abdul
Rahman al-Nuaimi, as a "global terrorist". The US accused him of sending nearly £366,000 to
"al-Qaeda's representative in Syria ", named as Abu Khalid
al-Suri.
Suri has
also been a senior commander of Ahrar al-Sham. If America was right to describe him
as "al-Qaeda's representative", then there was an overlap between the
leadership of the two groups.
Mr Nuaimi
is also accused by the US
treasury of transferring as much as $2 million per month to "al-Qaeda in Iraq " and $250,000 to al-Shabaab, the
movement's affiliate in Somalia .
Mr Nuaimi denies the allegations, saying they are motivated by his own
criticism of US
policy.
But critics
question why Qatar
has failed to act against him. "It's deeply concerning that these
individuals, where sufficient evidence is in place to justify their inclusion
on the US sanctions list, continue to be free to undertake their business
dealings," said Stephen Barclay, the Conservative MP for North East
Cambridgeshire.
A Foreign
Office spokesman insisted there was no such risk, saying: "We encourage
further progress to prevent terrorist financing from individuals in the [Gulf]
region. We have honest and robust conversations with all our Gulf partners on
these issues, including Qatar ."
One
diplomat from a country in the Middle East said Jabhat al-Nusra had been a
beneficiary of Qatar 's
help for a period last year. "They are partly responsible for Jabhat
al-Nusra having money and weapons and everything they need," said the
diplomat.
There was
no evidence of Qatar 's
largesse going directly to Isil, he added, but this could have taken place by
accident rather than design. "I don't think they have any intention to
support Isil, but it's a fact they did support Jabhat al-Nusra. And some people
moved from Jabhat al-Nusra and went over to Isil and they took their weaponry
with them," added the diplomat.
Four
branches of the Qatari government handle relations with armed groups in Syria and Libya : the foreign ministry, the
defence ministry, the country's intelligence agency, and the personal office of
the ruler, Emir Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani.
In the case
of Syria , Qatar 's chosen method for supporting its
favoured insurgents is to pass large sums to middlemen in Turkey . These
figures then use the money to buy weapons from third countries, notably Croatia , and arrange for their onward transfer
to rebels in Syria .
Experts
question how much control Qatar
has over this process and whether the middlemen might be pursuing their own
aims and pocketing much of the money.
"Qatar was handling weapons and supplies for Syria , but they were never really keeping a full
grip on the nature of the conflict," said Michael Stephens, the deputy
director of the Royal United Services Institute's office in Qatar . Others
believe that Qatar
was acting very deliberately.
Last month,
Gerd Müller, the German international development minister, implicated Qatar in the
rise of Isil. "You have to ask who is arming, who is financing Isil
troops. The keyword there is Qatar ,"
he said.
Yet a state
endowed with large reserves of gas and oil and one of the world's biggest
sovereign wealth funds can wield immense influence, even over Berlin . Qatar was duly able to secure a
formal withdrawal of this charge from the German government.
On
Wednesday, the 34-year-old Emir of Qatar, who was educated at Harrow and Sandhurst , took pains to deny the accusation while
standing alongside Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor. "What is
happening in Iraq and Syria is extremism and such organisations are
partly financed from abroad, but Qatar has never supported and will
never support terrorist organisations," he said.
The
credibility of that denial depends partly on how you define a "terrorist
organisation". Qatar
has let Hamas, the armed Palestinian movement, base its political leadership in
Doha since
2012. Qatar 's
government has funded Hamas and the previous Emir paid an official visit to the
Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip in 2012.
As a small
country with relatively weak armed forces and 250,000 citizens, Qatar is trying
to guarantee its security by reaching in every direction. As well as providing
an office for Hamas , Qatar also hosts the forward
headquarters of US Central Command and the al-Udeid military airbase, serving
as the hub for all American air operations in the region.
But Qatar 's
willingness to support extremists has caused private dismay. "It's a
puzzle and, to be honest, it's a distasteful one," said a former Western
official who has dealt with Qatar .
"There
are people around the Gulf who are supporting people who are grotesque in their
values and seem incapable of translating it into their minds how grotesque it
is."
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