Daily Kickoff
Good Thursday morning.
In today’s Daily Kickoff, we report on New Jersey gubernatorial candidate Ras Baraka’s attendance at a 2004 Nation of Islam event where he applauded the extreme rhetoric of Louis Farrakhan, and do a deep dive into Israel’s “Qatargate” scandal. We also have the scoop on an effort by two House committees to investigate connections between federal NGO funding and Israel’s 2023 judicial protests, and talk to GOP legislators about Vice President J.D. Vance’s reluctance to strike Houthi targets. Also in today’s Daily Kickoff: Eric Levine, Gal Gadot and Martín Varsavsky.
What We’re Watching
- The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee is holding a hearing on campus antisemitism this morning. More below on what to expect.
- We’re keeping an eye on the ongoing protests across Gaza, where anti-Hamas demonstrators have for days been rallying against the terror organization.
- The Washington Institute for Near East Policy’s Michael Knights, Noam Raydan, Elizabeth Dent and David Schenker will speak at an event this morning focused on the U.S. military campaign against the Houthis in Yemen.
- Israeli Diaspora Minister Amichai Chikli’s antisemitism conference, which has sparked backlash for its inclusion of several far-right European politicians, begins this afternoon in Jerusalem. Chikli, Australian journalist Erin Molan and activist and author Ayaan Hirsi Ali are slated to give the event’s keynotes. This evening, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will address the gathering. Last night, Israeli President Isaac Herzog held an event for world Jewish leaders focused on global antisemitism.
- Israel Tech Week kicks off tonight in Miami with a welcome reception.
- For baseball fans, today is Major League Baseball’s Opening Day.
What You Should Know
The State Department announced yesterday that the U.S. had signed off on a potential sale of eight unmanned drones to Qatar with a price tag of nearly $2 billion.
“The proposed sale,” the State Department said, “will improve Qatar’s capability to meet current and future threats by providing timely intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance, target acquisition, counter-land, and counter-surface sea capabilities for its security and defense.”
It was a statement tinged with irony — that the U.S. would sell military drones to Qatar, one of Hamas’ key patrons and a chief backer of instability across the region, in an effort to help Doha “meet current and future threats” — as the Gulf nation’s actions and support for malign actors pose existential threats to American citizens and allies, Jewish Insider’s Melissa Weiss reports.
Qatar serves as many things: sponsor of Hamas, home to many of the senior Hamas officials who are still alive after nearly 18 months of war; a major foreign donor to American universities; an intermediary in ceasefire and hostage-release talks between Israel and Hamas; the owner of Al Jazeera, the region’s most-watched news network; and a hub for the thousands of American service members stationed at the Al Udeid Air Base.
And then there’s Doha’s dealings with senior Israeli and American officials. White House Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff has repeatedly praised Qatar, with whom he did business prior to his appointment to the Trump administration. In a recent interview with Tucker Carlson, Witkoff described the Qataris as “well-motivated … good, decent people.” FBI Director Kash Patel, Attorney General Pam Bondi and EPA head Lee Zeldin have all received money from Doha in exchange for consulting or lobbying services. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who earlier this week testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee as the Trump administration’s nominee to be ambassador to Israel, reportedly received $50,000 to visit Qatar in 2018.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office is now wrapped up in its own scandal involving Qatari money. Known in Israel as “Qatargate,” it’s a money-laundering and bribery case being investigated by the Shin Bet and Israeli police. See our feature story below.
Even the families of Israeli hostages have been advised not to criticize the Qatari government — advice that came from the Richardson Center, a U.S.-based organization that — you guessed it — receives substantial funding from Qatar.
Qatar uses its vast financial resources — (it has the highest per capita GDP in the region) — to buy friendship and influence. Its alleged extensive bribery campaign to win the high-stakes contest to host the 2022 World Cup underscored the degree to which Doha was willing to put money into attracting the world’s attention and favor. Bloomberg reported earlier today that the Quintet Private Bank, owned by the Qatari royal family, is accelerating efforts to hire private bankers to the Luxembourg-based bank.
On American college campuses, Qatar has invested more than $11 billion in recent decades. Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, one of the country’s top schools for the subject, has for nearly two decades had a Doha branch that has trained thousands of journalists who have passed through it.
But Doha’s influence in the media space doesn’t stop on college campuses. It hosts a “Media City” to incubate media companies and journalists, and recently announced partnerships with Bloomberg and CNN.
Across the Arab world, Al Jazeera is the most-watched television network, broadcasting for the last year and a half what it frames as an Israeli genocide in the Gaza Strip to a viewership that is already inclined to oppose the Jewish state. A number of the news outlet’s Gaza-based staffers — who pulled double duty as Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad operatives — have been killed since the beginning of the war.
Qatar claims that Al Jazeera has journalistic independence from Doha, but it was just a few years ago that Qatar forced Al Jazeera to pull a lengthy and nefarious documentary about American pro-Israel organizations compiled from hidden-camera footage of its subjects. The move was done at the behest of Jewish groups in Washington, who suggested that spiking the documentary might help Qatar improve its standing among American Jewish groups at a time when Doha had been marginalized by its Arab neighbors. (The documentary ultimately never aired on Al Jazeera as a result of the Qatari government’s involvement, and was instead posted by the extremist website Electronic Intifada.)
On Oct. 7, 2023 — as Hamas was committing massacres across southern Israel, burning families alive in their homes, taking elderly grandparents and babies hostage and raping women at a music festival — Qatar’s Foreign Ministry released a statement saying that Doha “holds Israel solely responsible for the ongoing escalation.” Hours later, video emerged of top Hamas leaders celebrating as they watched coverage of the attacks — on Al Jazeera, naturally.
Qatar is more than the arsonist and the firefighter. It is the local media reporting on the fire, the EMT providing first aid and the co-conspirator providing the kindling and matches — important factors for the U.S. to keep in mind as it moves forward on providing additional military support to Doha.
Baraka’s background
NJ gubernatorial candidate Baraka applauded violent rhetoric by Louis Farrakhan

New Jersey gubernatorial candidate Ras Baraka was a speaker at an event with Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan in the early 2000s and applauded violent and conspiratorial rhetoric by the controversial preacher, Jewish Insider’s Marc Rod reports.
Flashback: Baraka, now the mayor of Newark, N.J., was the deputy mayor at the time, a position he held from 2002 to 2005. Following strong debate performances, Baraka has been seen as surging in a crowded field of Democratic candidates in the gubernatorial race. During a 2004 speech in Newark at which Baraka was a featured guest, Farrakhan expressed disagreement with the nonviolent philosophy of Martin Luther King Jr. and voiced support for violent retaliation, comments that elicited approval from Baraka. “The cracker hit you on your jaw, you break his neck, that’s the way we think,” Farrakhan said, to loud applause from the gathered crowd. In a video of the event posted by the Nation of Islam, Baraka can be seen rising to his feet and applauding that comment.