Become a Member
Opinion

How unfree Qatar is shaping the free West in its own image

From campuses to media, Qatar has used its wealth to advance an Islamist agenda. The real issue isn’t that the tiny Gulf emirate is playing this game. It’s that we are

June 19, 2025 15:15
Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani (front-L)  GettyImages-2214900746
Chequebook diplomacy: Qatar Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani (second right) arriving in Baghdad ahead of the 34th Arab League summit last month (Image: Getty)
3 min read

What do Oxford University, Paris Saint-Germain Football Club and Hamas have in common? They’ve all been beneficiaries of Qatar’s largesse – a miniature Gulf petrostate with outsized ambitions, a dismal human rights record and a gift for laundering its image through Western investments.

Recent headlines that Donald Trump may accept a $400 million plane from the emirate, conveniently timed with Qatar Airways’ record-breaking Boeing deal, have cast fresh light on the country’s chequebook diplomacy. For years, Doha has funnelled money into Western economies, sports clubs, property portfolios and – most troublingly – universities.

The generous funding of Western academia is particularly jarring. This Gulf monarchy embodies everything our elite institutions claim to oppose. Homosexuality is illegal. Women remain subjugated under “male guardianship laws”. Political parties don’t exist. Criticising the emir can land you in jail. Freedom House, the US-based non-profit which assesses each country’s political freedoms and civil liberties, scores Qatar a dismal 25/100, classifying it as “Not Free”.

And yet the Gulf state plays patron to elite institutions that pride themselves on liberal values. Qatar is the largest foreign donor to US universities. In Britain, its cash reaches into Oxford, King’s College London and beyond. Leading international universities have opened satellite campuses in Doha. Few seem troubled that the same regime hosting Western educational outposts also hosts Hamas, entertained Taliban representatives, and finances Islamist movements with, shall we say, rather limited enthusiasm for “diversity and inclusion”.