Exposing Qatar’s Growing Influence

June 28, 2025
Qatar Airways signed a major deal with Australian airline Virgin Australia. | Photo: Public Domain
Qatar Airways signed a major deal with Australian airline Virgin Australia. | Photo: Public Domain

Australians now enjoy cheaper flights to Europe, thanks to Qatar Airways’ $1 billion deal for a 25% stake in Virgin Australia, recently approved by Treasurer Jim Chalmers.

Greenlighting 28 weekly flights from Australia to Doha reverses Labour’s 2023 block on national interest grounds. Transport Minister Catherine King had cited Qatar’s 2020 invasive internal searches of Australian women, yet now Qatar’s state-owned airline sidesteps that, buying Virgin’s air rights, but using its own planes and crew.

Qatar isn’t a stranger to using wealth to buy its way in through the back door with their alleged bribery crushing Australia’s 2010 FIFA World Cup hosting bid.

Some speculate that Qatar plans to purchase all of Virgin. Would this give their government access to details on frequent flyers, including regime critics?

Covid and wars in Ukraine and Israel demonstrated the importance of local control over a fleet of planes. In a volatile security environment, are Australians comfortable with foreign control of one of the country’s two major airlines?

During Australia’s just finished election campaign, no Australian politician dared to touch the topic of Qatari influence.

Qatar practices modern slavery. Up to 6500 worker deaths were linked to the World Cup. Human rights groups have been silent about the deal. Imagine the outcry and boycott campaigns from the Greens if Virgin had partnered with Israel’s EL AL.

After Iran, Qatar is the largest state sponsor of radical Islamist groups.

On 7 October 2023, Hamas leaders Ismail Haniyeh and Khaled Meshaal, celebrated from Doha’s luxury hotels as their terrorists slaughtered 1,200 Israelis.

Qatar’s billions have propped up Hamas since 2012, funding its tunnel network. Its Defence Minister once tweeted, “we are all Hamas.”

Beyond Hamas, Qatar has housed a rogues’ gallery of terror groups, including the Taliban, Al-Qaeda financiers and 9/11 planner Khaled Sheikh Mohammed who worked for its government in the 1990s.

Qatar backs the Muslim Brotherhood sparking unrest across the Arab world, so much so that in 2017, several of its neighbours blockaded Qatar for three years.

After September 11, Saudi Arabia reformed, and recently the UAE signed the Abraham Accords. Qatar took up the mantle of extremism among Sunni states.

Qatar’s two-faced tricks partly explain the failure to secure the release of all the Israeli hostages held in Gaza. There have been leaks showing that Qatar urged Hamas to take a more demanding stance. Recently they were even called out by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Would we tolerate an airline partnership with Afghanistan’s Taliban Government or the Islamic Republic of Iran? Qatar isn’t far off.

Alongside aviation, Qatar is buying Australian farmland, energy assets and property but its most visible presence is Al Jazeera. State-owned Al Jazeera, funded with $750 million annually, beams into Australian homes via ABC and SBS which elevated it from a niche satellite channel here. It hasn’t criticised Qatar in 30 years, instead serving as Hamas PR, airing degrading hostage ceremonies and securing exclusive interviews with Yahya Sinwar and other terrorist leaders. Israeli intelligence alleges its journalists doubled as Hamas operatives during the 7 October massacre.

Banned in a dozen countries for incitement, including Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, it is the only major media outlet banned in Israel where a special law labelled it a ‘Hamas mouthpiece’. Even the Palestinian Authority bans it.

In the US, Al Jazeera was required to register as a foreign agent. It is sidelined with a tiny audience because major networks avoid the station once known for broadcasting Osama bin Laden’s speeches.

Taxpayer-funded broadcasters ABC and SBS provide Al Jazeera unparalleled legitimacy.

Australia sanctions Russian and Iranian media yet the major role that Qatar’s state-owned, extremist media is granted by Australia’s taxpayer-funded broadcasters is a stark example of foreign influence.

Qatar also focuses its influence on education. It is the largest foreign donor to American universities with estimates of $10 billion since 2000.

It’s unsurprising that campuses experiencing the greatest explosions in antisemitism include Qatar’s major beneficiaries. Qatari money reportedly flows to American K-12 schools.

Unlike the US, Australia doesn’t disclose individual foreign donors, but Austrade boasts over 20 Australian universities collaborate with Qatari institutions.

Chinese Confucius Institutes on Australian campuses faced scrutiny. Qatar’s involvement, including in Islamic and Arabic studies centres demands similar attention.

Qatar pursues a dual agenda, funding Islamist extremism globally while sanitising its image by buying up Western cultural icons like French football team, Paris Saint-Germain (PSG), UK Department store, Harrods and Italian fashion house, Valentino. Qatar’s purchase of Harvey Weinstein’s Miramax film production company granted it rights to 700 movies. This strategy climaxed in the 2022 FIFA World Cup where the world overlooked Qatar’s abysmal human rights record, discrimination against Christians, women and gays and credible bribery allegations and gathered in the blistering desert to play soccer.

Journalists, thinktanks and influencers on the left and on the right are on Qatar’s payroll. Incredibly both Tucker Carlson and Jeremy Corbyn fawn over Qatar. Is there another issue that these two agree on?

Qatari charm offensives have seen a US Senator and EU parliamentarians charged with accepting bribes. Aides in Israel’s Prime Minister’s office of all places were charged with taking Qatari funds. Is something similarly sinister occurring in Australian politics?

Sometimes it seems that the battle for Israel is never- ending. Our enemies are numerous and constantly shifting. For at least the past decade, supporters of Israel, both Jewish and Christian have focused heavily on the Shia axis led by the head of the octopus, the Islamic Republic of Iran. 7 October was a spectacular setback for that axis of evil. Its arms have been cut down one by one. Hamas, Hezbollah and the Assad Regime are shells of their former self. The Houthis are facing a sustained campaign from the Trump Administration.

The Islamic Regime itself is unstable and once its nuclear threat is eliminated it will be a shell of itself.

In the coming decade, the major threat to Israel may come from the radical Sunni, ‘Muslim Brotherhood’ aligned axis. Its two main patrons are NATO member Turkey and the tiny gulf state of Qatar. Radical Sunni terrorist groups continue to pose a threat. The new Syrian Government is a major uncertainty and there is every chance that more moderate Arab governments, in particular Jordan could fall to the Qatari-backed Muslim Brotherhood. As supporters of Israel, we must recognise the danger and pivot. Iran’s Regime is mostly a pariah worldwide and even in Australia. This is not the case with Qatar. We must continue to expose Qatar’s Government for who they are. Advocates for Israel should spread awareness by raising Qatar in conversations, on social media and when speaking to members of Parliament.

With just 350,000 citizens, fewer than the Australian city of Newcastle, Qatar’s influence here is outsized. Nobody begrudges Australians cheaper holidays on Greek beaches or Swiss ski-slopes, but Australian politicians must be clear-eyed. We can’t let Qatari money and influence serve as a Trojan horse, importing extremist values, damaging social cohesion and risking national security.

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  • Robert, a Sydney native, holds a Bachelor of Laws (Hons) from Bond University and is admitted to the legal profession in Queensland. After working in law for several years, he became AJA's Public Affairs Director, later advancing to CEO.During his time at AJA, Robert's work has been featured in major outlets like The Australian, The Daily Telegraph, and the Jerusalem Post, and he's appeared on various TV and radio programs.Notably, Robert was the sole representative from the Australian Jewish community to speak at a Federal Senate inquiry on human rights in Iran and has actively advocated for persecuted Muslim Uyghurs in China.

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