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International-UN-NGOs
How Peace Negotiator Martin Indyk Cashed A Big, Fat $14.8 Million Check From Qatar
2016-04-25
Long piece from Tablet, found with the help of a regular Rantburg reader on Facebook. Just the lede here...
The New York Times recently published a long investigative report by Eric Lipton, Brooke Williams, and Nicholas Confessore on how foreign countries buy political influence through Washington think tanks. Judging from Twitter and other leading journalistic indicators, the paper’s original reporting appears to have gone almost entirely unread by human beings anywhere on the planet. In part, that’s because the Times’ editors decided to gift their big investigative scoop with the dry-as-dust title “Foreign Powers Buy Influence at Think Tanks,” which sounds like the headline for an article in a D.C. version of The Onion.

Except, buried deep in the Times’ epic snoozer was a world-class scoop related to one of the world’s biggest and most controversial stories—something so startling, and frankly so grotesque, that I have to bring it up again here: Martin Indyk, the man who ran John Kerry’s Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, whose failure in turn set off this summer’s bloody Gaza War, cashed a $14.8 million check from Qatar. Yes, you heard that right: In his capacity as vice president and director of the Foreign Policy Program at the prestigious Brookings Institution, Martin Indyk took an enormous sum of money from a foreign government that, in addition to its well-documented role as a funder of Sunni terror outfits throughout the Middle East, is the main patron of Hamas—which happens to be the mortal enemy of both the State of Israel and Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah party.

But far from trumpeting its big scoop, the Times seems to have missed it entirely, even allowing Indyk to opine that the best way for foreign governments to shape policy is “scholarly, independent research, based on objective criteria.” Really? It is pretty hard to imagine what the words “independent” and “objective” mean coming from a man who while going from Brookings to public service and back to Brookings again pocketed $14.8 million in Qatari cash. At least the Times might have asked Indyk a few follow-up questions, like: Did he cash the check from Qatar before signing on to lead the peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians? Did the check clear while he was in Jerusalem, or Ramallah? Or did the Qatari money land in the Brookings account only after Indyk gave interviews and speeches blaming the Israelis for his failure? We’ll never know now. But whichever way it happened looks pretty awful.

Or maybe the editors decided that it was all on the level, and the money influenced neither Indyk’s government work on the peace process nor Brookings’ analysis of the Middle East. Or maybe journalists just don’t think it’s worth making a big fuss out of obvious conflicts of interest that may affect American foreign policy. Maybe Qatar’s $14.8 million doesn’t affect Brookings’ research projects or what the think tank’s scholars tell the media, including the New York Times, about subjects like Qatar, Hamas, Israel, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and other related areas in which Qatar has key interests at stake. Maybe the think tank’s vaunted objectivity, and Indyk’s personal integrity and his pride in his career as a public servant, trump the large piles of vulgar Qatari natural gas money that keep the lights on and furnish the offices of Brookings scholars and pay their cell-phone bills and foreign travel.
Then again, maybe not...
Posted by:Steve White

#6  Whores gotta get paid
Posted by: Frank G   2016-04-25 20:57  

#5  article is 18 months ago

Sept. 17, 2014. Good catch, lord garth.
Posted by: trailing wife   2016-04-25 20:55  

#4  article is 18 months ago

missing is the $$$$ that Qatar has given to the Clinton Presidential Museum, the Clinton Global Initiative, etc.

Those who took the money should have registered as foreign agents but, of course they didn't.
Posted by: lord garth   2016-04-25 18:00  

#3  Per diem for The Taliban Five.
Posted by: DepotGuy   2016-04-25 10:50  

#2  In fact, Qatar is a US protectorate. The close Qatar-U.S. relationship was noted when former Arab League Secy-General Amr Moussa acknowledged (11-2012) that Qatar's powerful Prince Hamad Bin Khalifa had offered to "pay in full" to ensure the U.S. military presence in Qatar. Moussa added, "When he thought of protection, [he] saw that Americans are the only ones willing to provide it." Sheikh Hamad "told Americans that he will ensure their expenses are paid in full, so now he enjoys security." (Al-Arabiya, November 30, 2012) Today, the Qatar base is the fulcrum of US policy in the Gulf. Qatar has not only paid off Indyk, but the Clinton family as wel..
Posted by: Phairt Barnsmell9169   2016-04-25 10:16  

#1  Can we have a surprize meter, please?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2016-04-25 03:35  

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