Qatar, UAE spend heavily on lobbyists amid a war of words | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Qatar, UAE spend heavily on lobbyists amid a war of words

In this Feb. 6, 2018 photo, dawn breaks over the Capitol in Washington. A simmering diplomatic crisis tearing at the Middle East is unfolding in Washington’s corridors of power as bitter rivals Qatar and the United Arab Emirates trade accusations and battle for influence with Congress and the Trump administration. Both countries spent heavily over the last year on lawyers, lobbyists, and public relations specialists as each seeks better trade and security relationships with the U.S., according to disclosure records filed with the Justice Department. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
Original Publication Date March 30, 2018 - 10:06 AM

WASHINGTON - A diplomatic crisis tearing at the Middle East has ignited a multimillion-dollar battle for influence in Washington between bitter rivals Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

Both countries spent heavily over the last year on lawyers, lobbyists, public relations and advertising to seek better trade and security relationships with the United States, according to disclosure records filed with the Justice Department.

On Qatar's roster: Republican former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, whose law firm received a $2.5 million retainer, and ex-advisers to Donald Trump's presidential campaign.

The UAE has an arrangement with The Harbour Group, a public relations and public affairs firm, for up to $5 million annually. The UAE's ambassador to the United States also relies heavily on his former director of legislative affairs, Hagir Elawad. She's now a registered lobbyist who earns $25,000 a month as the embassy's chief liaison to Capitol Hill.

The dispute between Qatar and the UAE took a wild turn earlier this week when a top fundraiser for Trump filed a lawsuit against the government of Qatar and several lobbyists working for Qatar, claiming they hacked his and his wife's emails. Elliott Broidy alleged that hackers from Qatar broke into their email accounts and Qatar's lobbying team then distributed the emails to journalists in an effort to discredit him.

The Associated Press reported Monday that a business associate of Broidy's, George Nader, had wired $2.5 million for an influence campaign Broidy was co-ordinating in Washington that accused Qatar of being a state sponsor of terrorism. Nader is a political adviser to the UAE and now a witness in the U.S. special counsel investigation into foreign meddling in American politics.

Agents of foreign governments are required to register with the Justice Department before lobbying so that there is a public record of their activities. But neither Broidy nor Nader is registered, according to a review of a public database maintained by the Justice Department.

The Qatar Embassy said Broidy's lawsuit is "without merit or fact." The other named defendant is Nick Muzin of Stonington Strategies, a lobbying firm that Qatar is paying $150,000 a month. Muzin, a former Senate aide who worked on Trump's presidential campaign, called Broidy's allegations "as flimsy as the promises he reportedly made to his clients."

Qatar has been under siege since early June, when the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and its other neighbours severed ties over claims the small, gas-rich monarchy was funding terrorism, disrupting Gulf unity and fomenting opposition across the region. They cut Qatar's air, sea and land routes, creating a de facto blockade. The countries vowed to isolate Qatar economically until it heeds their demands.

But Qatar, which has denied supporting or funding terror groups, has insisted it can survive indefinitely on its own. The crisis, according to Qatari officials, was triggered nearly a year ago when hackers took over their state-run news agency and posted fabricated comments attributed to Qatar's ruler that called Iran an "Islamic power" and said Qatar's relations with Israel were "good."

Qatari officials who investigated the attack didn't pinpoint who was responsible, but they said media in the UAE appeared ready and prepared to report the fabricated remarks once the site was hacked.

Broidy's lawsuit characterized two of the firms hired by Qatar — Ashcroft Law Firm and Avenue Strategies — as enabling the country to "whitewash its record and hide the true facts about its support for terrorists."

Michael Sullivan, a partner at the Ashcroft firm, called that statement "recklessly and patently false." He said the firm's role is to review and as necessary strengthen Qatar's existing programs for combating money laundering and global terrorism. Ashcroft is a GOP former Missouri governor and U.S. senator served as attorney general in Republican former president George W. Bush's administration.

"We were not hired as lobbyists," Sullivan said.

A former Trump campaign adviser, Barry Bennett, founded Avenue Strategies with Trump's ex-campaign manager Corey Lewandowski. Lewandowski has since parted ways with the firm. Justice Department records show the embassy of Qatar paid Avenue Strategies $2.3 million between July and mid-January.

Bennett declined to comment on Broidy's lawsuit. "I will bite my tongue and refer you to the embassy," he said.

Avenue Strategies and other lobbyists working for Qatar sought to derail bipartisan legislation that singled out Qatar for supporting the militant group Hamas. Bennett, for example, in mid-November forwarded to members of the Foreign Affairs Committee a letter from a former Israeli intelligence official who declared that Qatar didn't provide military support to Hamas, as the bill stated.

Another firm in Qatar's employ, Husch Blackwell Strategies, used a more traditional approach: Jobs.

The firm warned in a fact sheet that a $6.2 billion contract Boeing won to build F-15 fighter jets for Qatar could be threatened if the bill is approved by the Republican-controlled Congress and the GOP Trump administration is pressured into imposing sanctions. That in turn could jeopardize 3,000 "well-paying jobs" in Missouri, where Boeing assembles the aircraft, according to the fact sheet.

But Broidy pushed hard for the bill's passage, doling out tens of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions as he pressed lawmakers to take a hard line against Qatar. The Foreign Affairs Committee approved the bill in November and it awaits review by another committee.

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Associated Press writers Tom LoBianco and Josh Lederman contributed to this report.

News from © The Associated Press, 2018
The Associated Press

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