Can Qatar's Tamim break off with Brotherhood


For decades, Qatari children have been taught curricula developed by the Muslim Brotherhood and since 1996 Qatari citizens have been brainwashed round the clock to change their beliefs and thoughts in line with the terrorist ideology of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Unlike the failed power grab of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and elsewhere, the terrorist group has succeeded in setting up the State of Qatar’s Brotherhood, without openly assuming power in Doha.

Qatar’s Father Emir Hamad Bin Khalifa Al Thani and the present Emir Shaikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al Thani were schooled on the group’s terrorist ideology by Yousuf Al Qaradawi and Abdul Halim Abu Shoqqa, chief figures of the organization.

Al Qaradawi moved to Qatar in 1961 to head the Qatari Secondary School Institute of Religions, before becoming a dean at Qatar University.

He founded the Faculty of Islamic Law at Qatar University in the 1970s, and then went on to become the linchpin for the Qatari ruling family’s designs to disseminate the Brotherhood project throughout the Middle East and North Africa and in Europe, especially from the early 1990s.

Qatar's Al Jazeera participates shamelessly in spreading the Muslim Brotherhood’s message, trampling in the process on all rules of ethics.

Al Jazeera, a real propaganda outlet and a weapon of psy-war against those who dare oppose Sheikh Tamim’s policies and his conception of Islam, is financed directly from Qatari state coffers at a cost of several hundreds of millions of dollars a year.

Since Qatar launched Al Jazeera in 1996, many of its Arab neighbors have been suspicious of Doha’s potential for political meddling. 

But with Qatar’s amping up of its involvement in regional affairs, particularly after the “Arab Spring,” these neighbors, in particular Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Bahrain, became even more suspicious—and ultimately at odds—with Qatar, especially in regard to its support of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Qatar’s support for the Muslim Brotherhood and its various branches is one of the central reasons behind its crisis in relations with Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the UAE, and Bahrain. 

Now that these four countries and Qatar have finally resolved this crisis diplomatically, the Qatari government’s ongoing relationship with the Brotherhood may serve as an indication of whether the diplomatic solution will be durable in the future.

In conclusion, the Muslim Brotherhood remains the key issue of contention in relations between Qatar and its Gulf neighbors. In 2014, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE classified the Brotherhood as a terrorist organization. 

Saudi Arabia and the UAE have also waged war against the Brotherhood in political, religious, and security arenas. It will be up to Qatar to find an alternative solution to official support for the Brotherhood if it wants to ensure continued reconciliation with Gulf countries.

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