Qatar used a pro-Israel businessman to pay Zionist body £75,000
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Qatar used a pro-Israel businessman to pay Zionist body £75,000

Zionist Organisation of America head says if cash had come from the Gulf state, the funds would be returned

Doha, Qatar
Doha, Qatar

A pro-Israel businessman doing public relations work for Qatar donated £75,000 ($100,000) to the Zionist Organisation of America out of money Qatar paid him to engage in “community engagement.”

Joseph Allaham, an owner of kosher eateries, said his donations to ZOA, a conservative pro-Israel group, came out of £1m ($1.45 million) intended by Qatar to woo Jewish and other leaders to its side in its dispute with Saudi Arabia, Mother Jones reported. Allaham disclosed the payments in a filing last week to register as an agent of a foreign government.

Morton Klein, the ZOA president, told Jewish Insider on Wednesday that he had been under the impression that the money came from Allaham’s own pocket. Klein said that if he determined the funds came from Qatar, he would return them.

Klein, in the past a sharp critic of Qatar, visited the country earlier this year at its invitation. He has said he used the visit to express his concerns about the country’s support for Hamas, its closeness to Iran and the hostility to Israel on Al Jazeera, the government-backed TV network. He has insisted multiple times, including to JTA, that he received no compensation for the visit beyond travel expenses.

Allaham in his filing said he also gave £75,00 ($100,000) to Our Soldiers Speak, a group that organises U.S. speaking tours for Israeli military personnel, as well as £37,000 ($50,000) to Mike Huckabee, who visited Qatar. Huckabee, the former governor of Arkansas, is an evangelical preacher who is prominent in the Christian pro-Israel community.

Allaham is now denouncing Qatar as inimical to Israeli and U.S. interests.

Another prominent Jewish figure, Nick Muzin, an adviser to Republicans, also said recently that he was ending his paid lobbying relationship with Qatar, although unlike Allaham he did not denounce the country.

Over the past year or so, there has been intensive lobbying of the U.S. Jewish community by both sides in an increasingly acrid Gulf dispute between Qatar and Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and a number of other countries. Saudi Arabia has led a blockade of Qatar, ostensibly because of its Iran and Muslim Brotherhood ties.

The Trump administration has gone back and forth in the dispute. Saudi Arabia is perhaps the most important Arab ally to the United States, but Qatar houses one of the largest U.S. military bases.

A number of Jewish figures have landed pronouncedly on one side or the other, and prominent figures have visited the country. Along with Klein, they include Malcolm Hoenlein, the executive vice chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organisations, and Alan Dershowitz, the constitutional law expert and Israel defender.

One figure caught up in the brouhaha is Elliott Broidy, a top Jewish giver to President Donald Trump’s campaign. Broidy joined George Nader, an Arab-American businessman, in making representations to the Trump administration on behalf of the UAE. He reportedly was involved in organising an anti-Qatar conference last year put on by the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, a think tank with pro-Israel ties.

Broidy has sued Muzin and Qatar, believing they hacked his emails, which led to the media reporting revelations such as his payment to an alleged mistress brokered by Michael Cohen, a lawyer who brokered similar payments for President Donald Trump.

Nader’s role in cosying up to the Trump administration is reportedly a focus of a federal investigation into improprieties by Trump’s campaign and presidency. Nader is cooperating with investigators.

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