U.S. tells Qatar to evict Hamas if it obstructs Israeli hostage deal
Secretary
of State Antony Blinken delivered the message to Qatar’s prime
minister, a U.S. official said, signaling Washington’s impatience as
cease-fire talks have languished.
Secretary
of State Antony Blinken alongside Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed
bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim al-Thani in Washington on March 5. (Drew
Angerer/AFP/Getty Images)
The
United States has told Qatar that it should expel Hamas if the group
continues to reject a cease-fire with Israel, an agreement the Biden
administration deems vital to easing the upheaval gripping the Middle East, a U.S. official told The Washington Post.
Secretary
of State Antony Blinken delivered the message to Prime Minister
Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani in April, according to the official,
who like others interviewed for this report spoke on the condition of
anonymity to discuss sensitive conversations.
Three
diplomats familiar with the situation said officials in the Gulf
emirate, which has hosted Hamas’s political leadership at America’s
request since 2012, have anticipated the request for months, but those
expectations sharpened in recent weeks amid mounting frustration over a
prolonged impasse on the cease-fire deal. Qatari officials have advised
Hamas officials — including Ismail Haniyeh, the group’s political leader
who lives in Doha, Qatar’s capital — that they should devise a backup
plan for residency should they need to leave, said one of the diplomats.
While
the Biden administration sees the threat of ousting Hamas as potential
leverage over the Islamist group responsible for the Oct. 7 cross-border
attack on Israel, some regional officials and analysts caution that
shuttering the Hamas political office in Doha would further complicate
efforts to communicate with its leaders and renew future hostage
negotiations.
Blinken — who returned to the Middle East this week in a last-ditch effort to secure a deal
that would halt fighting, release some of the remaining 13o or so
hostages, and forestall a planned Israeli offensive in southern Gaza —
has thanked Qatar for its role in mediating talks with Hamas and put the onus squarely on the militant group to accept Israel’s latest proposal.
“We
are determined to get a cease-fire that brings the hostages home and to
get it now, and the only reason that wouldn’t be achieved is because of
Hamas,” Blinken said Wednesday in Tel Aviv. “There is a proposal on the
table, and as we’ve said: no delays, no excuses. The time is now.”
A
Hamas delegation is expected to visit Cairo over the weekend,
potentially to respond in writing to Israel’s latest proposal, Reuters
reported Friday.
The
United States has told Qatar that it should expel Hamas if the group
continues to reject a cease-fire with Israel, an agreement the Biden
administration deems vital to easing the upheaval gripping the Middle East, a U.S. official told The Washington Post.
Secretary
of State Antony Blinken delivered the message to Prime Minister
Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani in April, according to the official,
who like others interviewed for this report spoke on the condition of
anonymity to discuss sensitive conversations.
Three
diplomats familiar with the situation said officials in the Gulf
emirate, which has hosted Hamas’s political leadership at America’s
request since 2012, have anticipated the request for months, but those
expectations sharpened in recent weeks amid mounting frustration over a
prolonged impasse on the cease-fire deal. Qatari officials have advised
Hamas officials — including Ismail Haniyeh, the group’s political leader
who lives in Doha, Qatar’s capital — that they should devise a backup
plan for residency should they need to leave, said one of the diplomats.
While
the Biden administration sees the threat of ousting Hamas as potential
leverage over the Islamist group responsible for the Oct. 7 cross-border
attack on Israel, some regional officials and analysts caution that
shuttering the Hamas political office in Doha would further complicate
efforts to communicate with its leaders and renew future hostage
negotiations.
Blinken — who returned to the Middle East this week in a last-ditch effort to secure a deal
that would halt fighting, release some of the remaining 13o or so
hostages, and forestall a planned Israeli offensive in southern Gaza —
has thanked Qatar for its role in mediating talks with Hamas and put the onus squarely on the militant group to accept Israel’s latest proposal.
“We
are determined to get a cease-fire that brings the hostages home and to
get it now, and the only reason that wouldn’t be achieved is because of
Hamas,” Blinken said Wednesday in Tel Aviv. “There is a proposal on the
table, and as we’ve said: no delays, no excuses. The time is now.”
A
Hamas delegation is expected to visit Cairo over the weekend,
potentially to respond in writing to Israel’s latest proposal, Reuters
reported Friday.ecretary of State Antony Blinken in Washington on March 29. (Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post)
After
a short-lived pause in fighting in November, during which 105 hostages
were exchanged for 240 Palestinian prisoners detained in Israel, Hamas
refused to release any others unless Israel agreed to a “comprehensive
cease-fire.” Israel has vowed the war in Gaza will not end until Hamas
is defeated militarily. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said this week
that Israeli forces would attack the group’s last stronghold in Rafah —
with or without a deal.
As
negotiations have dragged on, American officials have grown more
impatient with Hamas, and Qatar has become an increasingly popular
target for U.S. politicians — ranging from Republican Sen. Tom Cotton
(Ark.) to Democratic Rep. Steny H. Hoyer (Md.), who recently
said the United States would have to reevaluate its relationship with
Qatar if it doesn’t apply “pressure” on Hamas to make a deal.
Other U.S. lawmakers have called on the Biden administration to force Qatar to cut ties with the group entirely.
The
White House and State Department as well as CIA Director William J.
Burns have encouraged Qatar, a key security partner that hosts a major
U.S. military base, and Egypt, the other main interlocutor with Hamas,
to lean on the group. But both countries can accomplish only so much
since Hamas’s military and political wings are distinct, and any final
decision on a deal rests with top military leader Yehiya Sinwar, who is believed to be in hiding in the group’s maze of tunnels beneath Gaza.
“Applying
pressure to Hamas in Doha is ineffective pressure,” an official briefed
on the talks said. “The problem is the guys making the decisions are in
Gaza, and they don’t care where the political office is located,” this
person said.
Patrick
Theros, a former U.S. ambassador to Qatar, said kicking Hamas out of
Qatar would be “a nightmare” for the White House, effectively
foreclosing any future talks.
“We’d be cutting off our nose to spite our face,” he said.
Hamas political leader Ismail Haniye in Doha, Qatar, on April 11. (Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters)
The
Hamas office in Qatar has been controversial since it was established
as part of an arrangement supported by the United States and Israel. For
more than a decade, Qatar — in coordination with Israel — sent money to
Gaza to help keep the Hamas-led government afloat.
“We
did not enter into a relationship with Hamas because we wanted to. We
were asked by the U.S.,” Majed Al-Ansari, adviser to the Qatari prime
minister and spokesperson for Qatar’s Foreign Ministry, said last week
in a rare interview with Israeli media.
“Qatar
is being used as a political punching bag for those who are looking
either to safeguard their political futures or to find more votes in the
next elections,” he said, an apparent jab at American politicians and
Netanyahu, whom he avoided mentioning by name.
In
the aftermath of the Hamas-led assault on Israel, Blinken told the
Qatari emir that Doha’s relationship with Hamas, which has functioned as
Gaza’s de facto government, could not be “business as usual” but privately communicated that the closure of the Hamas office could be delayed to make time for critical hostage negotiations.
Since
then, U.S. officials have consistently praised Qatar’s mediation
efforts. President Biden “thanked the emir and his senior team for their
tireless efforts to secure the release of all hostages held in Gaza,” the White House said this week after a phone call between the two leaders.
The
speculation about Hamas’s future comes as the U.S. military moves
attack drones, fighter jets and other aircraft from the United Arab
Emirates to Qatar after the UAE imposed restrictions on U.S. operations,
according a senior diplomat from the region. The move, first reported
by the Wall Street Journal, is a fresh sign of how the Oct. 7 attacks
have altered long-standing dynamics in Middle East.
U.S. forces have used UAE
bases in the Middle East to stage airstrikes against Iranian aligned
groups in Syria, Iraq and Yemen as Israel’s war in Gaza has raised
tensions in the region to new heights. The risk of blowback for links to
American military activity has unnerved some of Washington’s Arab
allies, causing the Pentagon to move aircraft to al-Udeid, a major U.S.
air base in Qatar, which has not imposed similar restrictions, the
diplomat said.
A U.S. B-1B bomber departing from al-Udeid, an air base in Qatar. (Master Sgt. Phil Speck/AP)
Israel,
the United States and European nations do not communicate directly with
Hamas because of the group’s terrorist designation, making Qatar a
vital go-between. But Qatar has grown increasingly frustrated with
mounting U.S. and Israeli criticism of its ties to Hamas and announced
last month that it would reevaluate its status as a mediator.
“There
are limits to this role and limits to the ability to which we can
contribute to these negotiations in a constructive way,” Mohammed, the
Qatari prime minister and foreign minister said last month.
Netanyahu, speaking to a U.S. audience in February, said Qatar could sway Hamas like no one else. “I urge you to press Qatar to press Hamas because we want our hostages released,” he said.
In
response, Qatar called Netanyahu’s comments “nothing but a new attempt
to stall and prolong the war for reasons that have become obvious to
everyone” — political gain.
U.S.
officials have privately said should Hamas leave Doha for a country
that has worse relations with Washington, such as Turkey or Lebanon, it
could make resolving the Gaza crisis even more difficult. But following
months of elusive hostage talks and what officials see as significant
Israeli concessions, they are more comfortable with the idea of pushing
for Hamas’s ouster.
Haniyeh,
the Hamas political leader, and other senior officials have spent
considerable time recently in Turkey, where he has had discussions with
top officials about residing there, one diplomat familiar the talks
said. Many Hamas members already have close ties to Turkey, and some
have moved their families there.
Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has praised Hamas as a “liberation
movement.” Last month, he met with Haniyeh in Istanbul, but he has
publicly dismissed reports that the group might rebase to Turkey.
If
NATO member Turkey did decide to host Hamas, it could inject a new
element of friction into already turbulent U.S.-Turkish ties.
Gonul
Tol, director of the Turkey program at the Middle East Institute, a
Washington think tank, said Erdogan’s motivations, if he were to invite
them to Turkey, could include pressure from his political base to
demonstrate support for the Palestinian cause and his desire to position
Turkey as an influential global mediator, as he did in the
Russia-Ukraine conflict. On the other hand, Ankara must consider the
certainty that such a step would inflame Turkey critics in Congress.
For Erdogan, “it’s a very complicated decision,” she said.
Egypt,
meanwhile, has ruled out Cairo as a potential base for the group. And
it was the closure of the Hamas office in Syria that preceded the
group’s move to Qatar.
Oman,
another Gulf nation, previously played a key role mediating between the
United States and Iran, but it is unclear if it would be willing to
permanently host the group.
George reported from Dubai.