Foul play in the Gulf
I thought this was an interesting read, though I'm sure some will find it insulting that I even posted this and the usual anti-Israel comments will follow. But hopefully some of you will find it interesting as well.
In yet another egregious instance of Arab men cutting off their noses to spite their faces, copies of the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue featuring Israel's stunning Bar Refaeli on the cover have been removed from Dubai magazine racks.
And, after intense pressure from the Association of Tennis Professionals, Dubai has reluctantly granted an entry visa to Andy Ram to play in next week's Barclays Dubai Tennis Championships - after barring Shahar Pe'er from playing in the Women's Tennis Association tournament, affecting her earnings, if not her ranking.
International response to such anti-Israelism by the United Arab Emirates (of which Dubai is the commercial center and a self-governing city-state) has been understated. The Washington Post and Wall Street Journal were critical, and the Tennis Channel cancelled plans to broadcast the Dubai women's tournament. Pe'er's fellow players, hearing about her exclusion at the 11th hour, were sympathetic but decided to go ahead and compete rather than forfeit millions of dollars in sponsors' support.
Sadly, anti-Israel frenzy has reached such proportions that in Malmö, Sweden, where Muslim immigrants comprise 25 percent of the population, the Davis Cup tennis first round tie against Israel next month will be played in an empty stadium.
Back in the UAE, the first ever "Emirates Airline International Festival of Literature," set for next week, is becoming a real page-turner owing to official censorship of Geraldine Bedell's novel The Gulf Between Us featuring a homosexual relationship set in a fictional Gulf emirate.
The Emirates, where fewer than 20 percent of the 4.4 million residents are citizens, likes to be perceived as a tolerant, pro-Western oasis. And, to be fair, the Saudi-controlled, Dubai-based satellite news channel Al-Arabiya makes a stab at modifying Al-Jazeera's radicalism. Still, public antagonism toward Israel and Western values is getting ever harder to cloak.
QATAR plays an even more duplicitous game, presenting itself as cosmopolitan while shilling for the Islamists. Back in 1996, it hosted the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations and seemed to be moving incrementally toward staking out a moderate position in Arab affairs. Indeed, as late as last year, Qatar allowed Pe'er to play in a WTA Tour tournament.
But at this week's three-day annual US-Islamic World Forum in Doha, co-hosted with the Brookings Institution's Saban Center, some Arab participants echoed a refrain commonly heard from Indonesia - where US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton just visited - to the Gulf States: If the US really wants to move closer to the Arab world, it will have to abandon its "near-blind" support for Israel and "overcome the veto power" of the Zionists on Washington's decision-making.
Qatar, which has the highest per-capita income in the world, has lately adopted a radically pro-Hamas foreign policy; in January, it suspended low-level diplomatic ties with Israel. Controlled by the family of Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, Qatar has the peculiar distinction of being 75-percent male thanks to its outsized expatriate workforce.
Sheikh Hamad is the main financial backer of the Doha-based Al-Jazeera. While Al-Jazeera's English-language website and television take a mild tone, the main, Arabic, enterprise aligns itself with the Hamas-Iran-Syria-Hizbullah bloc. For instance, it identifies those killed in the Gaza fighting as shahids. The Muslim Brotherhood has long been a presence in Qatar, and Al-Jazeera serves as a popular, attractive platform for spreading its extremist views throughout the region.
During Operation Cast Lead, Qatar hosted a meeting of radical Arab states, plus Iran, to mobilize support for Hamas and also pledged millions of dollars for Gaza's reconstruction. The al-Thani family also played a key role in facilitating Hizbullah's incremental ascendency in Lebanon.
But Qatar is shrewd enough to hedge its bets by hosting bases of the US military's Central Command, which oversees American operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. The State Department considers both Qatar and the UAE - two of the world's richest countries - as friendly states.
HOW HAS Qatar, which promotes the Muslim Brotherhood and bankrolls the poisonous al-Jazeera station, succeeded in maintaining its image as a friend of the West? And how is Dubai, with its on-off boycott of Israel, able to sustain its own moderate image?
The answer is money. Lots of it. To win friends, influence people, and manipulate perceptions.
Source: The Jerusalem Post
I personally don’t see these as Faul Play rather tactical moves which Gulf States learn from Israel and USA
I couldnt get visa to attend flower show in Lahore.
will Israel renew visas of Jazeera reporters?
Qatar and UAE are sovereign states and we all have to accept it.
Not denying that brit.
As for Qatar's approach and thinking, I guess time will tell how well it works.
"The other side" is also an entity of many faces..
Qatar , to me is more advanced in its approach and thinking , then most of its neighbours..
edifis said:
Qatar is like an "unfinished masterpiece".
Perhaps the painter hasn't yet decided about the final tones,shades and contrast of his picture.
Probably the final masterpiece will be petrify as "La Gioconda" melting in a Nuclear holocaust.
LOL!, PM "Mixed Media" indeed!
PM, your detailed analysis and feedback on this post suggest u are an exceptionally well informed person. So far, your posts are generally balanced and backed up by logic or hard (or rather soft :)) evidence. gotta say i like reading whatever u write just to enjoy your way of reasoning.
Is there a way in Qatarliving were I can choose to receive a notification when a certain member publishes a post :) ?
I find it hard to foresee whether it's going to become a masterpiece or not edifis. It's as though they haven't even decided what medium to work in yet!
Qatar is like an "unfinished masterpiece".
Perhaps the painter hasn't yet decided about the final tones,shades and contrast of his picture.
Glad you found the article interesting PM, and I enjoyed reading your views. I agree that none of it is telling us anything we didn't already know, I just think it's interesting to see how the "other side" sees Qatar.
Ha zayd, someone will manage to find it insulting.
Definitely an interesting read tallg, thanks.
the posted stories were facts removed of opinion. the comments that followed varied from disdain to unwavering support. i really don't think qatarliving is too geared towards either side, it averages out quite nicely...but i admit that that might not be the case as i tend not to check any political threads too often.
i guess it's another way of looking at it if that's what you intended. i don't think anyone will find it insulting, i think they'd be happy that the silly boycotts they had on sports and literacy are pissing off some people in israel.
It's not claiming to be unbiased! Just as the related stories posted on QL previously haven't been unbiased.
Perhaps the simple answer is that Qatar should be applauded for learning from the West in how to be two faced when it comes to serving their own needs and furthering their own goals..
hardly an unbiased source
britexpat: my sentiments exactly
Ramblings of a frustrated Jew. Thats alllllllllll