[House Hearing, 115 Congress] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office] ASSESSING THE U.S.-QATAR RELATIONSHIP ======================================================================= HEARING BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA OF THE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED FIFTEENTH CONGRESS FIRST SESSION __________ JULY 26, 2017 __________ Serial No. 115-55 __________ Printed for the use of the Committee on Foreign Affairs [GRAPHIC NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.foreignaffairs.house.gov/ or http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/ ______ U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE 26-427PDF WASHINGTON : 2017 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Publishing Office, http://bookstore.gpo.gov. For more information, contact the GPO Customer Contact Center, U.S. Government Publishing Office. Phone 202-512-1800, or 866-512-1800 (toll-free). E-mail, [email protected]. COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS EDWARD R. ROYCE, California, Chairman CHRISTOPHER H. SMITH, New Jersey ELIOT L. ENGEL, New York ILEANA ROS-LEHTINEN, Florida BRAD SHERMAN, California DANA ROHRABACHER, California GREGORY W. MEEKS, New York STEVE CHABOT, Ohio ALBIO SIRES, New Jersey JOE WILSON, South Carolina GERALD E. CONNOLLY, Virginia MICHAEL T. McCAUL, Texas THEODORE E. DEUTCH, Florida TED POE, Texas KAREN BASS, California DARRELL E. ISSA, California WILLIAM R. KEATING, Massachusetts TOM MARINO, Pennsylvania DAVID N. CICILLINE, Rhode Island JEFF DUNCAN, South Carolina AMI BERA, California MO BROOKS, Alabama LOIS FRANKEL, Florida PAUL COOK, California TULSI GABBARD, Hawaii SCOTT PERRY, Pennsylvania JOAQUIN CASTRO, Texas RON DeSANTIS, Florida ROBIN L. KELLY, Illinois MARK MEADOWS, North Carolina BRENDAN F. BOYLE, Pennsylvania TED S. YOHO, Florida DINA TITUS, Nevada ADAM KINZINGER, Illinois NORMA J. TORRES, California LEE M. ZELDIN, New York BRADLEY SCOTT SCHNEIDER, Illinois DANIEL M. DONOVAN, Jr., New York THOMAS R. SUOZZI, New York F. JAMES SENSENBRENNER, Jr., ADRIANO ESPAILLAT, New York Wisconsin TED LIEU, California ANN WAGNER, Missouri BRIAN J. MAST, Florida FRANCIS ROONEY, Florida BRIAN K. FITZPATRICK, Pennsylvania THOMAS A. GARRETT, Jr., Virginia Amy Porter, Chief of Staff Thomas Sheehy, Staff Director Jason Steinbaum, Democratic Staff Director ------ Subcommittee on the Middle East and North Africa ILEANA ROS-LEHTINEN, Florida, Chairman STEVE CHABOT, Ohio THEODORE E. DEUTCH, Florida DARRELL E. ISSA, California GERALD E. CONNOLLY, Virginia RON DeSANTIS, Florida DAVID N. CICILLINE, Rhode Island MARK MEADOWS, North Carolina LOIS FRANKEL, Florida PAUL COOK, California BRENDAN F. BOYLE, Pennsylvania ADAM KINZINGER, Illinois TULSI GABBARD, Hawaii LEE M. ZELDIN, New York BRADLEY SCOTT SCHNEIDER, Illinois DANIEL M. DONOVAN, Jr., New York THOMAS R. SUOZZI, New York ANN WAGNER, Missouri TED LIEU, California BRIAN J. MAST, Florida BRIAN K. FITZPATRICK, Pennsylvania C O N T E N T S ---------- Page WITNESSES Jonathan Schanzer, Ph.D., senior vice president, Foundation for Defense of Democracies......................................... 7 Matthew Levitt, Ph.D., director and Fromer-Wexler fellow, Stein Program on Counterterrorism and Intelligence, The Washington Institute for Near East Policy................................. 33 Mr. Ilan Goldenberg, senior fellow and director, Middle East Security Program, Center for a New American Security........... 45 LETTERS, STATEMENTS, ETC., SUBMITTED FOR THE HEARING Jonathan Schanzer, Ph.D.: Prepared statement..................... 10 Matthew Levitt, Ph.D.: Prepared statement........................ 36 Mr. Ilan Goldenberg: Prepared statement.......................... 47 APPENDIX Hearing notice................................................... 88 Hearing minutes.................................................. 89 The Honorable Gerald E. Connolly, a Representative in Congress from the Commonwealth of Virginia: Prepared statement.......... 90 ASSESSING THE U.S.-QATAR RELATIONSHIP ---------- WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 2017 House of Representatives, Subcommittee on the Middle East and North Africa, Committee on Foreign Affairs, Washington, DC. The subcommittee met, pursuant to notice, at 2:16 p.m., in room 2172, Rayburn House Office Building, Hon. Ileana Ros- Lehtinen (chairman of the subcommittee) presiding. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. The subcommittee will come to order. After recognizing myself and Ranking Member Deutch for 5 minutes each for our opening statements, I will then recognize other members seeking recognition for 1 minute. We will then hear from our witnesses. And without objection, witnesses, your prepared statements will be made a part of the record, and members may have 5 days to insert statements and questions for the record, subject to the length limitation in the rules. We have many members of our subcommittee who are also on the Judiciary Committee, including Ranking Member Deutch, and there is an important markup happening as we speak. So you might see a lot of members moving back and forth, and we appreciate the time they can spare to come over here. Thank you, Mr. Deutch. The Chair now recognizes herself for 5 minutes. Last month, this subcommittee convened a hearing on the challenges and opportunities for the United States Saudi Arabia bilateral relationship. Today, we focus on the U.S.-Qatar relationship and Qatar's relationship with its neighbors. I think it is important to note that this rift in the Gulf is not new. Katherine Bauer, a former senior-level official at the Treasury Department stated earlier this month at a think tank event, ``Saudi Arabia and the UAE have sought for years to kind of galvanize Qatar's actions against the terrorist financiers that were operating and continue to operate in Qatar.'' Qatar has been known to be a permissive environment for terror financing, reportedly funding U.S. designated foreign terrorist organizations, such as Hamas, as well as several extremist groups operating in Syria. In 2014, the former deputy director of CIA, David Cohen, called out Qatar publicly along with the Kuwaitis, because according to him, ``The private engagement with these countries had not achieved what we were trying to achieve.'' In fact, Qatar has openly housed Hamas leaders, Taliban leaders, and has several individuals who have been sanctioned by our U.S. Treasury Department, and it has failed to prosecute them. At least one high-ranking Qatari official provided support to the mastermind of the 9/11 terror attacks against our country, Khalid Sheikh Mohammad. Then, of course, there is Khalifa Mohammed, who is a U.S.-, EU-, and U.N.-designated international terrorist for his role in financing al-Qaeda and the 9/11 mastermind. In 2008, he was tried and convicted in absentia by Bahrain for his terrorist activity, and arrested later that year by Qatar only to be released by the Qataris 6 months later, and then openly financed by Doha. Can anyone guess what Khalifa Mohammed has been up to these days? He was implicated in terror financing activities in 2012, but more recently, he has been alleged to be financing and supporting terror in both Iraq and Syria with no response from the Qatari Government. Hamas leader, Khaled Meshaal, also made Doha his headquarters for years while the Qatari's--with the Qatari's Government support and even the Muslim Brotherhood has received significant support from Qatar. Of course, not all of this is supported by the government in Doha. Many individuals and charities in Qatar have been known to raise large sums of money for al-Qaeda, the Nusra front, Hamas, and even ISIS. In Qatar, there are three buckets: Terror financing by the government; terror financing done in Qatar through their own citizens that their government may not know about; and terror financing in Qatar that the government knows about but does nothing to stop. According to the 2015 country reports on terrorism, the State Department stated, ``Entities and individuals within Qatar continue to serve as a source of financial support for terrorists and violent extremist groups, particularly regional al-Qaeda affiliates such as the Nusra front.'' There is no excuse for openly harboring terrorist and supporting groups that seek to harm our allies, and the excuse by Qatar that it is harboring these nefarious actors is because the U.S. asked them to no longer stands up. Qatar should not be continuing this reckless policy due to past mistakes from previous Republican and Democratic administrations. We must not allow for our air base to be used as a means to justify this sort of behavior, and a lack of a more appropriate response. Doha's behavior must change the status quo, and if it does not, it risks losing our cooperation on the air base. The truth of the matter is that none of the Gulf countries--none of the Gulf countries are without their issues. All of the nations have been involved in funding different groups at some point that we would not approve of. But it seems like Saudi Arabia and the UAE are making progress at a faster rate while Qatar is making some progress but still is lagging slowly behind. According to the Congressional Research Service, ``In October 2016, Daniel Glaser, then Assistant Secretary for Terrorist Financing in the Office for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, told the Washington, DC, Research Institute that over the past decade, Qatar has made less progress in countering terrorism financing than had Saudi Arabia.'' We must analyze the totality of our relationship with these Gulf countries. While Qatar only helps to facilitate our operations at our air base, the UAE, for example, has spent 12 years with us fighting alongside in Afghanistan and has been involved in counterterrorism operations with the U.S. in Libya. So moving forward, one outcome that I hope comes out of this dispute is for the Gulf countries to work closely with our Treasury Department's Financial Action Task Force to root out and disrupt terror financing streams. This uneasy time may just be an opportunity for us to take a long hard look at how, and for some, if, we can effectively address and stop terror financing in the region, and ultimately defeat the extremism that threatens the security of us all. And with that, I turn to my friend, the ranking member, Mr. Deutch, for his statement. Mr. Deutch. Thank you, Madam Chairwoman. Thanks to the witnesses for being back before our committee. I thank the chairman for convening today's timely hearing to explore our relationship with Qatar at a moment of great instability in the region. The ongoing diplomatic rift between Qatar and its Gulf neighbors is not good for the parties of the conflict; it is not good for the region; and it is not good for American interests. It is a distraction from today's most pressing challenges, Iran's destabilizing activities, the conflict in Syria, and the spread of terrorism. For most Americans who expect conflict in the Middle East to fall along sectarian lines, or between competing regional hegemons, it is confusing to see Sunni Arab neighbors in conflict. But this is a dispute over longstanding grievances, over Qatar's support financially, and through its state-owned Al Jazeera news station, for actors and groups that Qatar's neighbors and, in many cases, the United States, see as deeply problematic. This feud, like others in the region, is a nuanced and deeply complex matter, and our relationship with Qatar is no less complex. A tiny but immensely wealthy nation pursues an ambitious foreign policy of close relations with all actors in the region. Unfortunately, this includes terror groups like Hamas and the Afghan Taliban. Qatar has served as a financial and political lifeline for Hamas' devastating rule in Gaza since the terror group took over more than a decade ago. Qatar has sent hundreds of millions of dollars into the Gaza strip, provides safe haven in Doha for Hamas leader, Khaled Meshaal, and helped legitimize Hamas rule in 2012 when the Emir became the first international leader to visit Hamas- led territory. Qatar has also supported other dangerous groups in the region, including sending advanced weaponry and financing to extremist elements in Syria and Libya, and Al Jazeera has given voice to clerics calling for suicide attacks against Americans and Israelis. These realities are troubling. But Qatar is also a close partner in our fight against terrorism in the region. Doha hosts and helps fund the largest U.S. military facility in the Middle East, essentially our forward operating base for U.S. Central Command. It is from this base that we supported the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and are, today, flying air strikes against ISIS. Qatar has also helped to serve as regional mediator oftentimes to the benefit of the United States. Qatar has helped broker ceasefires between Hamas and Israel during periods of intense fighting. The Qataris also helped secure the release of Peter Theo Curtis, an American hostage held for nearly 2 years by the al-Qaeda linked Nusra front in Syria just days after that tragic beheading of fellow American journalist, James Foley. Qatar has also provided the U.S. with valuable and actionable intelligence on the financing streams for ISIS and has begun taking steps to hold Qatar accountable for terror financing. But they have got a lot more to do. While they have begun prosecuting Qataris for sending money to terror groups, they have done so in secret, hardly an effective deterrent, and it is unclear whether the outcomes of these prosecutions have led to any significant jail time or penalty. I was pleased to see the signing of a new memorandum of understanding with Secretary Tillerson earlier this month on terror financing, but we don't yet know the details of how this agreement would be implemented, and we wait to see the results. Madam Chairman, it is important to note also, that Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt, and other nations now isolating Qatar, face challenges as well. Two weeks ago, our subcommittee held a similar hearing on our relationship with Saudi Arabia, in which we explored both our strategic partnership as well as our deep concern over Saudi Arabia's slow progress on human rights and continued exporting of fundamentalist ideology. Today's hearing should not be about determining who is right. Today's hearing should rather make it clear that this fighting among partners does not advance America's interests. We should be pushing for unity among our allies to fight common threats. We should be pushing all of our partners in the region to cut off funding to terror groups. We should be urging every leader to curtail hate speech, and improve the records of human rights, including treating women as equal members of society. Madam Chairman, I hope that today we can assess our relationship with Qatar thoughtfully. I hope our witnesses can help us unpack how past diplomatic risk between Qatar and its Gulf neighbors can inform our path forward, and I hope that we can review the major demands made on Qatar to reduce relations with Iran, shut down the Turkish military base, sever all ties to terror organizations, including the Muslim Brotherhood, and shut down Al Jazeera to understand the motivations behind these demands, and in an effort to see how a resolution might actually come. I trust that our witnesses today will lead us in an interesting and worthwhile conversation. And I appreciate-- again, I appreciate them being here. And I yield back the balance of my time. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Thank you very much, Mr. Deutch. And now we will turn to our members for any opening remarks they might have, starting with Mr. Cook of California. Mr. Cook. Thank you, Madam Chair. This is going to be a very interesting hearing. It is almost similar to the one we had with Turkey. Friend or foe? And, obviously, as already been discussed, some of the issues that are going to come up, the relationship with Hamas, Taliban, financing and everything else, and now there is a new wrinkle, and that is the World Cup and the North Korean workers that are going to be paid for by that government there with the money going back to North Korea that is probably going to be used to finance more missile research. And I don't think I have to tell the panel or anybody here that this is an even more troubling scenario than some of the others. We are talking about a large number of North Koreans, including the North Korean military that are going to be working on that. And I hope that our panel will also discuss that as well as the other issues that were just raised. Thank you, Madam Chairman. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Thank you, sir. Mr. Suozzi of New York. Mr. Suozzi. Suozzi. Thank you so much, Madam Chair. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Suozzi. I am so sorry. Mr. Suozzi. It's okay. I am used to that for a long time now. Madam Chairman and ranking member, I want to thank you so much for holding this hearing. It is very timely. It is very difficult for many of us to untangle all the complicated relationships that exist in this region. We simply don't have the background that the witnesses do, and that is why we are so appreciative of them being here to testify today. Between the religious dispute and the tribal and family relationships and the historic disputes and people's economic interests, it is sometimes difficult to untangle who the different parties are. And no one in the region really has clean hands. And we need to figure out how to promote our agenda in America and throughout the West, which is that we have to stand strong and hard against people who use propaganda and hate speech and economic warfare to promote extremism and violence. So I am excited to be here today and to listen to what the witnesses have to say. Thank you. Mrs. Wagner [presiding]. Thank you, gentlemen. The Chair now recognize Mr. Zeldin for 5 minutes--oh, 1 minute. These are 1 minute that we are doing. Sorry. I have just taken over the chair. Mr. Zeldin, you are recognized. Mr. Zeldin. Well, thank you, Madam Chairwoman. And I am very much looking forward to today's hearing and listening to our witnesses and being able to ask questions and getting feedback. A lot of great our thoughts are already shared, I especially like the ranking member's opening testimony. He really touched on so much of what I, too, care deeply about. Recently, I was in Qatar, and I found them to be very welcoming. They were going as far out of their way as possible to make progress in our relationship. We visited the military base that was there, and our servicemembers were well taken care of in a good, strategic location. And at the same exact time, I am greatly concerned by the welcoming atmosphere that exists for Hamas. And I just want to better understand the future of this relationship, and the reasons why the reality exists as it does right now in 2017. So thank you, again, for doing this hearing. I look forward to the testimony. Mrs. Wagner. Thank you, Mr. Zeldin. The Chair now recognizes Mr. Lieu for 1 minute, please. Mr. Lieu. Thank you, Madam Chair, and ranking member, for holding this hearing. There have been a series of allegations between Qatar and the countries who are imposing a blockade, and it is hard for me to figure out what is true and what is false. But let me say what I do see. I do see a blockade that has resulted in some cruel consequences. From what I have read, you have families now being separated based on national origin, and that to me is highly troubling. I also see a Trump administration that is sending very mixed signals. At the same time, the Secretary of State is saying de-escalate, do not blockade, you have the President doing the opposite, essentially claiming credit for this blockade. Then you have also the United States sending $12 billion worth of fighter jets to Qatar. I would love to see the panel clarify that, and I want you to tell us not only what our policy toward Qatar should be, but what it actually is right now. I yield back. Mrs. Wagner. The gentleman yields back. The Chair now recognizes the gentleman from California, Mr. Issa, for 1 minute. Mr. Issa. Thank you, Madam Chair. It seems like only yesterday that the President said, You are either with us or against us. And the world said, oh, it is too simple. But I think as we evaluate Qatar and the other Gulf states, we have to ask that basic question is, is Qatar with us? Are they moving toward being more with us? Are they cooperating? Are they moving toward Iran? Are they moving away from the U.S.? These are questions that I believe that we are going to be asking today that I am hoping to hear throughout the day, because I believe that although you are either with us or against us, there are shades of gray in all of our allies in the region. It is clear that Turkey has been moving away from us since 2003. It is clear that Qatar has not been the best of actors when it comes to taking away funding from those who support terrorism, and it is clear that if they are moving with us, we need to have that demonstrated just as we asked Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and others to demonstrate on a regular basis. Thank you, Madam Chair. I yield back. Mrs. Wagner. The gentleman yields back. The Chair now recognizes the gentleman from New York, Mr. Meeks, for 1 minute. Mr. Meeks. Thank you, Madam Chair. And I would want to join with the statement of Mr. Lieu. I think what we have to talk about here is the issue of fairness, and we need to make sure, I think, that when you talk about Qatar and the other countries in the region, we as the United States, I don't think, should be picking and choosing. We should be talking, because we need them all, and we need to figure out how we work collectively together. Qatar has been--I think it is clear, they have shown that they have done some things that have very good for the United States with our military base, trying to make sure that working with us in regards to the war on terror. And I think what needs to happen here, and especially if you talk about Qatar, we need to bring in as a committee the individuals from both the Bush administration and the Obama administration, because there is deep dialogue and conversation that we could have with them to talk about the region and the people that they have asked, Qatar being one, to do certain things on behalf of the United States. And if that is the case, then those individuals should not be held responsible if they are working cooperatively with us. So I look forward to hearing the testimony from the witnesses, and I think that we just need to make sure that we have a level playing field here. Mrs. Wagner. Thank you, Mr. Meeks, for your opening statement. We will now turn to our witnesses. I would, first, like to welcome back Mr. Jonathan Schanzer, who is the senior vice president of research for the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Dr. Schanzer serves as a counterterrorism analyst at the Department of Treasury, and prior to that, worked as a research fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Welcome back, Dr. Schanzer. I would also like to welcome back Dr. Matthew Levitt, who directs the Stein Program on Counterterrorism and Intelligence at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Previously, Dr. Levitt served as the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Intelligence and Analysis at the U.S. Department of Treasury, and before that, as an FBI counterterrorism analyst. We are glad to have you back with us today, Dr. Levitt. Finally, I would like to welcome Ilan Goldenberg, who is a senior fellow and director of the Middle East Security Program at the Center for a New American Security. Prior to CNAS, Mr. Goldenberg served as the chief of staff of a special envoy for Israeli-Palestinian negotiations at the U.S. Department of State. From 2012 to 2013, Mr. Goldenberg served as a senior professional staff member on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee covering Middle East issues. In that capacity, he acted as one of the lead drafters of the Syria Transition Support Act, which provided additional authorities to arm the Syrian opposition. The bill passed the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in May 2013. And I thank you for being here with us today. Dr. Schanzer, we will begin with you for your opening statement. STATEMENT OF JONATHAN SCHANZER, PH.D., SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, FOUNDATION FOR DEFENSE OF DEMOCRACIES Mr. Schanzer. Madam Chairman, Ranking Member Deutch, and members of the subcommittee, on behalf of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, thank you for the opportunity to testify. As many of you know, FDD has been producing research and analysis on Qatar since the eruption of the Arab Spring in 2011. Our critique has been consistent. We have pointed to Qatari support for Hamas, the Taliban, jihadists in Syria, jihadists in Libya and the Muslim Brotherhood. We have been critical of Qatar for the invective broadcast on state-owned Al Jazeera. We have tracked the many reports suggesting that Qatar paid ransom to terrorism groups, and we have noted through the work of my colleague, David Andrew Weinberg, that Qatar has failed to take action against U.S. and U.N.-designated terrorist financiers. In my written testimony, I document these problems, and I am happy to discuss them further. But for a moment, I would like to address how Qatar has responded to the allegations against it. After ignoring criticism from think tanks like FDD for the better part of a decade, Qatar now claims it is being unfairly singled out. To be sure, the other Gulf countries have their problems. A recent State Department report noted that U.N.- designated terrorist financiers continue to operate in Kuwait; Saudi Arabia continues to finance the spread of Wahhabism; and the entire Gulf suffers from a democracy deficit. But to understand why Qatar is identified first among Gulf states for terrorism financing, just imagine for a moment that you are a policeman, and you have just watched five cars speed past you going 80 miles per hour. And zooming past them is a red Ferrari going 90 miles an hour. Which car would you pull over? Well, that Ferrari is Qatar. Indeed, Qatar support is overt. It is egregious, and it is brazen. As the Gulf crisis has dragged on, Qatar has also been defiant, insisting its definition of terrorism differs from that of its critics. This is a particularly poor defense from a country claiming to be an American ally in the war on terrorism. As for the current crisis between Qatar and its neighbors, the Saudis and the Emiratis have been engaged in serious competition with Qatar for years. They attempt to outdo one another through foreign investment, domestic businesses, media interests, lobbying in western capitals, and other soft power. Since the Arab Spring, however, that rivalry has boiled over. Both sides have thrown their support behind various proxies representing their interests in the Middle East. The Qataris back the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamist actors, and for their part, the Saudis and the Emiratis are working to preserve the Arab world order, pushing for stability at the expense of the possibility for reform. These two visions of the Middle East are fundamentally at odds with one another. The wise U.S. policy is not to back one Gulf state or another. We must rather pursue policies ensuring that terrorism financing in the Gulf comes to an end. I offer you the following suggestions: First, Congress should assess whether Qatar should continue to host Al Udeid, our most significant air base in the Middle East. Fighting our war on terrorism from Qatar sends a convoluted message to our allies in the region. Congress should work with the Justice Department to ensure that Qatar not only adopts laws to combat terrorism financing, but also fully implements them. Congress should consider passing the bipartisan Stop Terrorist Operational Resources and Money, or STORM Act, of 2017. The bill, which was introduced in the Senate and not yet in the House, could label Qatar and other countries as Jurisdictions of Terrorism Financing Concern. Congress should press the State Department, pursuant to the State Department Authorization Act, to issue its report on which States paid ransom to terrorists over the last year. Congress should press for full implementation of the Export Administration Act, subjecting countries like Qatar that host terrorist operatives to certain licensing requirements for dual-use goods. Congress, of course, must continue to monitor Qatar's neighbors. Indeed, even if Qatar's problems were resolved tomorrow, the Gulf would remain an area of significant concern for terrorism finance. Finally, I believe it is time we have a frank discussion about Gulf money in Washington. Those who feed from this trough are often unable to engage honestly about the policies and behaviors of their benefactors, even when they fly in the face of U.S. interests. Indeed, I would be curious to hear how many of you have been approached by lobbyists since the Gulf crisis began, let alone in the lead up to today's hearing. There are issues that I did not address in this testimony. If I miss anything you wish to discuss, I am happy to answer your questions. And on behalf of Foundation for Defense of Democracies, I thank you again for inviting me to testify. [The prepared statement of Mr. Schanzer follows:] [GRAPHICS NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] ---------- Mrs. Wagner. Thank you, Dr. Schanzer. Dr. Levitt, you are recognized for your opening statement. STATEMENT OF MATTHEW LEVITT, PH.D., DIRECTOR AND FROMER-WEXLER FELLOW, STEIN PROGRAM ON COUNTERTERRORISM AND INTELLIGENCE, THE WASHINGTON INSTITUTE FOR NEAR EAST POLICY Mr. Levitt. Thank you, Madam Chairman, Ranking Member Deutch, members of the subcommittee. Thank you for the opportunity to appear before you and assess the U.S.-Qatar relationship and Qatari counterterrorism efforts to date. Qatar has been a long-time ally of the United States and hosts the largest U.S. military base in the Middle East. But the U.S. has also long criticized the Qatari Government for its lax counterterrorism policies; in particular, shortcomings regarding efforts to combat terror financing. Moving forward, it is critical to bring this Gulf crisis to a close, and the best way to do that would be to find face saving but substantive and verifiable ways for Qatar to address the most serious shortcomings in its counterterrorism and counter extremism posture. Some of the recent accusations made against Qatar are exaggerated, but many of the claims against Qatar are substantive and focus on long-simmering issues that Doha should have addressed a long time ago. In recent years, Qatar has maintained an open-door policy for a wide range of Islamist extremism groups from Hamas to the Taliban and others. Most disturbing, however, is the tolerance for fundraising in support for al-Qaeda's Syria branch, Al- Nusra. While Qatar has made previous efforts to halt terror financing, the efficacy of these efforts is questionable. For example, in 2014, the State Department credited Qatar with shutting down Saad al-Kaabis online fundraising platform for al-Qaeda and Syria called Madad Ahl al-Sham. But the following year, the U.S. Treasury designated Al-Kaabi, who was still operating as a financial supporter of al-Qaeda and al- Qaeda-Syrian affiliate, the Al-Nusra front. Al-Kaabi came up again in the context of a 2017 designation of a Kuwait-based terror financier, Mohammad al-Anizi. Evidently, Al-Kaabi continued to provide funding for Nusra even after Qatar supposedly shut down its fundraising platform in 2014, 3 years earlier, putting a pretty big question mark over the integrity of Qatar's measures to stop terror financing. Doha has been particularly sketchy on the issue of the prosecution of terrorism financiers in Qatari courts. According to the State Department's 2015 country reports, Doha had made efforts to prosecute significant terrorist financiers. As of 2016, Qatar had prosecuted five terrorist financiers: Ibrahim al-Bakr, Saad al-Kaabi, Abd al-Latif al Kawari, Abd al-Rahman al-Nuaymi, and Khalifa al-Subaiey It is now clear that of these, two were acquitted, one was convicted but acquitted on appeal, and one was convicted in absentia. As a result, none were in jail when the current inter-Gulf spat broke out. The ones still resident in Qatar are reportedly under surveillance. According to recent reports, some new arrests may have been made since the current crisis began, likely involving some of those previously tried in Qatari courts. Qatar's lack of transparency about these cases led to much speculation about the country's commitment to these cases. And it is worth noting that just recently, the director of the Qatari Government communications office said, and I quote, ``All individuals with links to terrorism Qatar have been prosecuted,'' which would mean that the total number of suspects is five, which is not the case. Let me give you just a couple of examples of this odd history. This would have been the second time that Ibrahim al- Bakr was convicted following his 2000 arrest, in which he was subsequently released from prison after he promised not to do terrorist activity in Qatar. Or consider Khalifa al-Subaiey, who was originally arrested in January 2008 in Bahrain for financing terrorism, undergoing terrorist training, facilitating the travel of others abroad to receive terrorist training and more. He was arrested again in March 2008 by Qatar and served a 6-month term in prison. He was supposedly under surveillance after he was released. But in 2015, the U.N. Committee on Al- Qaida Sanctions updated his listing with new information, which is no small matter, because it required a new vote of the full U.N. Security Council, and reported that al-Subaiey had resumed terrorist activity. According to the committee, ``After his release, al-Subaiey reconnected with al-Qaeda financiers and facilitators in the Middle East and resumed organizing funds and support of al- Qaeda.'' It is important to note that while terror finance prosecutions are difficult cases and acquittals are part of a normally functioning justice system, these are not the only tools available for Qatari officials to deal with financiers effectively serving as regional bundlers of terror funding from donors throughout the region to al-Qaeda and Syria in particular. The first big test for Qatar will be to populate the domestic designation list just created by Qatar's Emir and to put people on that list. The U.S. just signed an MOU on counter terror financing with Qatar. It created a whole bunch of new authorities. These authorities need to be implemented in full. Qatar has a history of past counterterrorism and counterterrorism-related laws in 2004, 2006, 2010, 2014. They were either not implemented, or not implemented in full, and so, therefore, this time, we have to make sure that these are done and done effectively. Moving forward, the most important thing is that Qatar populates this designation list in a transparent manner, starting with those individuals already designated by the U.S. Treasury and United Nations, who remain at large, and may be continuing to fund and provide material support to al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups. There are several other recommendations I make in my written statement. I thank you again for the opportunity to testify before you today, and look forward to answering any questions you may have. [The prepared statement of Mr. Levitt follows:] [GRAPHICS NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] ---------- Mrs. Wagner. Thank you, Dr. Levitt, for your testimony. I now turn to Mr. Goldenberg for your opening statement. STATEMENT OF MR. ILAN GOLDENBERG, SENIOR FELLOW AND DIRECTOR, MIDDLE EAST SECURITY PROGRAM, CENTER FOR A NEW AMERICAN SECURITY Mr. Goldenberg. Madam Chairman, Ranking Member Deutch, distinguished members of the subcommittee, thank you for the opportunity to testify today on the U.S.-Qatar relationship and the implications of the current divisions within the Gulf Cooperation Council. My objective with this testimony is not to recount the various moves and countermoves each side has made in the past few weeks since the crisis erupted. Instead, I will provide some context as to what created this situation, the implications for U.S. interests, and the possible way ahead. Qatar is a complex American partner, to say the least. On the one hand, it has pursued a policy that has included building relations with a number of actors the United States finds problematic, including extremist groups in Syria, the Taliban, Hamas, and the Muslim Brotherhood. This approach has been part of an independent, and sometimes provocative Qatari foreign policy that has chaffed on some of its Gulf neighbors and, in some instances, these neighbors have viewed Qatari reactions as interfering in their own internal affairs, which infuriated them and been a major reason for the recent actions. From an American perspective, the Qatari policy in Syria and the slow response to terror financing were probably most problematic. When the Syrian civil war erupted, Qatar was on the forefront in providing financial aid and weaponry to the Syrian opposition groups of all stripes with little control or oversight. The Qataris were far from alone in committing this mistake as a number of other Gulf state-actors, as well as Turkey also pursued an anybody-but-Assad policy without fully vetting some of these anybodies. Certainly, the United States made its own share of mistakes during this time period. While Qatar and Turkey in particular were the most aggressive in funding some of the more ideologically extremist groups, including al-Qaeda affiliate, Jebhat al-Nusra, and we are still living with these mistakes in Syria and will be for years to come. But on some issues, Qatar has been a useful partner. Qatar hosts a critical U.S. air base with more than 10,000 American troops. Al Udeid Air Base is a central node from which the United States conducts air operations in Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan, as well as other operations across the Middle East. The bases hosted U.S. military aircraft for over 15 years, and during that time, has been a reliable partner, allowing access for a broad array of military operations. Moreover, Qatar's flexible approach to problematic actors has, at times, made it a useful connector when the diplomacy inevitably requires negotiation and engagement with unsavory characters. Take for example, Qatar's relationship with Hamas and the aid it provides in Gaza. On the one hand, both the United States and Israel designated Hamas as a terrorist organization. On the other, Israel has cooperated quietly with Qatar in recent years to ensure financial assistance gets into Gaza in order to try to improve the situation on the ground and avoid another conflict. Whether one chooses to view Qatar positively or negatively, what is clear is that the inter-GCC split that has emerged in recent weeks has not been good for U.S. interests. Only 2 weeks after President Trump visited Riyadh to unify the Arab world behind the common objectives of countering extremism and pushing back on Iran, America's Gulf allies have launched into an internal feud that has largely distracted them and us. Meanwhile, the split has created new opportunities for Russia and Iran to increase their influence in the region. Going forward, the Trump administration should take a number of steps. First, settle on one consistent message and approach instead of open breaks between the President and the Secretary of State, which only cause confusion and undermine our ability to mediate in this crisis. Second, move away from viewing the Middle East through a pure black and white prism. The Trump administration focused so heavily on unifying and backing the Sunni, Arab states, they fail to recognize the internal splits among them. This inadvertently gave a green light to some of our Gulf partners to move ahead with these actions against Qatar. Third, settle in for the long haul, as this crisis is not going to be solved any time soon. We should clearly signal to our partners that we are still focused on the challenges posed by ISIS and Iran, and we expect them to do the same instead of focusing all their diplomatic energy on trying to convince Washington to take their side in this fight. Fourth, encourage de-escalation on all sides by at least getting them all to tone down their public rhetoric while emphasizing that the U.S. is willing to play a constructive mediating role. However, it is ultimately an inter-Arab disagreement that they will need to be out in front in solving. And, finally, fifth, I think we should use this crisis as an opportunity to engage with all the countries of the GCC to shine more of a light on the problem of terror financing. As some of the other witnesses and members have said, Qatar certainly is a major problematic actor in this space, but it is far from the only one, and this could actually be an opportunity, in terms of this crisis, to actually push all of them to be better on this issue. So thank you very much, and I look forward to answering your questions. [The prepared statement of Mr. Goldenberg follows:] [GRAPHICS NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] ---------- Mrs. Wagner. Thank you, Mr. Goldenberg. And I thank all of our witnesses for their opening statements. I would like to open up my line of questioning by recognizing the fact that I think this hearing is very timely. Both Qatar and the Gulf countries have been important partners, and we would like to see a constructive, honest resolution to the crisis. Qatar is a military ally of the United States, but has simultaneously supported Hamas and al-Qaeda. We have a role in easing tensions in the region, but not at the expense of our national security interests and our values. Qatar must cut ties with terrorists; our allies cannot provide support to our enemies. Dr. Schanzer, I have no sympathy for supporters of Hamas, nor do you. You have called the U.S. base in Qatar an ``insane arrangement,'' I think is the quote. Do you believe the base location is dangerous? And how would you propose safely moving the base in such a way that doesn't compromise operations in the region? Mr. Schanzer. Congresswoman Wagner, thank you for the question. Look, I would probably put it this way: First of all, it is an insane arrangement. The idea that you have this forward air base that is conducting the most crucial operations in the war on terrorism, and that is it mere miles away from the Taliban presence, Hamas presence where there are designated terror financiers from the Nusra front running around in Doha. This sends the wrong message. It sends the wrong message to the United States and to our allies in the coalition to fight ISIS and al-Qaeda. It sends the wrong message to our Middle East allies as well. In other words, when we tell them that we are going to hold them to account for their terror financing issues, and then they look at what is going on in Qatar, the optics, I think, are really rather terrible. As for the safety of our troops, so far I would say, so good. We have not had incidents where it appears that our troops are being threatened. I would actually say that is not the case with Incirlik Air Base in Turkey, which is another country that supports some of these terror groups. But at the end of the day, our recommendation has been that we begin to assess what it would take to move the base. Maybe not all of it. Maybe not all of it at once, but we need to take a look regionally at the other areas where we may be able to base some of these assets and to signal to the Qataris that we are willing to move. We don't need to do it. We may decide at the end of the day, the Pentagon may decide they can't afford to do it, it is too difficult, but in the meantime, it is important to message to the appropriate people in Qatar that we are willing to look at this problem and to reallocate assets as necessary. Mrs. Wagner. Thank you. Dr. Levitt, can you discuss what actions the Saudis and other Gulf states have taken to combat terror financing that the Qataris have not? Mr. Levitt. Thank you for the question. You know, terror financing is a problem throughout the Gulf, and it took the Saudis some time to get on top of this problem. For a long time, U.S. Treasury pointed to Saudi Arabia as the epicenter of this problem, but the Saudis turned a corner. There is more that they can do, but the Saudis now run intelligence operations. They prosecute people. They work with us in designating people. There have even been joint U.S.-Saudi designations including of charities and individuals in Saudi Arabia. That is domestically difficult politically for them, but they have done it. There is more that they can do, but we now tend to point to others within the GCC toward Saudi Arabia, and we are trying to show them what we would like them--the types of things we would like to do more. There is an irony that Kuwait is the country that is kind of playing the middleman on this, and Kuwait is often described as being just as bad as Qatar on terror finance. And that is something that we need to recognize as well. But the fact is that there are things that Qatar should have done a long time ago, and that they have not done, and that we have, frankly, tolerated them not doing. And the overt financing of effectively the most important al-Qaeda entity in the world, al-Qaeda and Saudi Arabia, is completely beyond the pale. Mrs. Wagner. Thank you. Mr. Goldenberg, in my limited time here, one of the demands from the Gulf states was that Qatar must close down the Turkish military base. I get that they are concerned about the Muslim Brotherhood's influence. But how important do you think this demand is in terms of regional stability and security, and is this one that should be dropped? Mr. Goldenberg. Thank you, Congresswoman, for the question. I think that on the list of demands, the Turkish air base is probably lower--the base is lower on the list of demands that the Emiratis and the Saudis and others are leveling. In most conversations, what you hear them really focusing on is, more has to do with what the Qataris might be doing in the press, than some of the sort of the personal attacks at certain point that the different sides are launching at each other right now. I think that is much more the source of the issue, and the terror financing issue that we have been talking about has been much more central to the debate than this Turkish base, that, frankly, there have been already a move for the Turks to deploy some forces there a couple of years ago, and then when this crisis erupted, they moved everything up; they moved it very quickly to sort of a symbolic step. It is a good example of an opportunity, or the crisis, and the move has actually backfired on some of our partners, if what they were trying to do was isolate Qatar. What they actually managed to do is strengthen the Turkey-Qatar relationship instead. So I would put this one probably as not as central as some of the other questions that have been out there before, but something that we will see as time goes on if they walk away from. Mrs. Wagner. Thank you for that insight. My time has elapsed. I now recognize the ranking member, Mr. Deutch, for 5 minutes. Mr. Deutch. Thank you, Madam Chairman. Mr. Goldenberg, you referred to the flexible approach to problematic actors. And--so the question I have for you and for the panel is, how can--what is that? How is it--here is how it is characterized. Right? It is characterized as, well, yes, we know that Hamas is a terrorist organization, but if our ally has a relationship, then perhaps that can help us somehow. Dr. Schanzer, I presume, would argue that Hamas is Hamas, and we should have nothing to do with them and our allies shouldn't either. Yet, the question is what does that flexible approach get us? And, Dr. Schanzer, if Qatar acted to move all of these terrorist groups out of Qatar, out of Doha altogether, where do they go? And to Mr. Goldenberg's point, is there some--is there some benefit to having them there instead of in the arms of ISIS or in Tehran? Mr. Goldenberg, can you help us sort this out? Mr. Goldenberg. Sure. Thank you, Ranking Member Deutch. And exactly, I think this is precisely sort of the point. It is complicated, but what I would say is--well, maybe I will start with the example of Hamas. And I will actually quote an Israeli former head of research, Josi Kuppelwieser, the former head of research for Israel's military intelligence who has been up here a lot, I believe, also in the past talking about incitements saying, just a year ago publicly, nobody else is ready to help out but Qatar when it comes to Gaza. So here is a perfect example of the situation we are dealing with. We have had three wars with Israel and Hamas over the few years in Gaza, with large casualties for Palestinians, large casualties for the IDF. And the Israelis have started to realize, well, maybe we should not be--sort of this approach was trying to squeeze Hamas and Gaza doesn't seem to be working. So maybe we need to think about a different approach and trying to at least alleviate the humanitarian situation and find ways to quietly establish channels with these guys so as to keep the situation calm and not have another conflict. Who is the only real channel that they have to do that, the Qataris. And so they have been using that channel, and we have been helping in some cases to facilitate that channel. So that is an example. And so, if Hamas was instead sitting in Tehran, which is a likely outcome of what would happen if they were kicked out of Doha, then I think what you would see is no ability to actually communicate in that way, and probably Hamas taking more aggressive action and less ability to squeeze them. So this isn't to justify the Qatari relationship with Hamas. I don't agree with that, necessarily. I think it is a problem. It is not something the U.S. should not have any kind of direct relationship with Hamas. Hamas is a terrorist organization bent on the destruction of Israel. But we sort of found that this approach by the Qataris at least has some benefits, and we should at least recognize that as opposed to just vilifying them, because we would like them to behave differently, but at the same time, they end up--when we ask them to do things that sometime are in our interest, they are able to push certain levers we are not able. Mr. Deutch. Dr. Schanzer? Mr. Schanzer. Thank you, Congressman Deutch. I am not even sure where to begin. In terms of the potential benefits from Qatar working with Hamas or allowing Hamas to operate out of there, it is sort of a counterfactual. We have yet to actually see what the benefits are, other than the fact that the Israelis have allowed the Qataris to provide assistance to Gaza, not to Hamas, but to the people of Gaza for reconstruction. On that, I think the Israelis would agree that it has been positive. I think we would all agree that it has helped, perhaps, forestall a major humanitarian disaster, and I think for that we should be thankful. But from there, I do have to question. I mean, it is not like Hamas doesn't have other places where it can operate. It has base in Turkey, for example. It has its home base in the Gaza strip. It operates out of the West Bank. It operates out of Sudan and Lebanon. It has a major presence across the Middle East. Why does it have to operate inside Doha where it gets a certain amount of legitimacy for this? And then perhaps one other thing to note here is that when people talk about how Qatar may have helped, perhaps, bring the conflict to an end in 2014, if you speak to the other actors in the region, they will tell you, whether it is the Egyptians or the Israelis or even others, they will tell you that is was actually the Qataris and the Turks that forestalled an end to the conflict. That they continued to negotiate on behalf of Hamas, and I think that they probably, in doing so, probably led to the loss of many, many more lives. Mr. Deutch. Unfortunately, I am out of time. Thank you. I yield back. Mrs. Wagner. The gentleman's time has expired. The Chair now recognizes the gentleman from California, Mr. Cook, for 5 minutes. Mr. Cook. Thank you, Madam Chair. In my opening remarks, I talked about this news story about the North Koreans working on a World Cup and figures that I read were about 3,000. And in the article it talked about the possibility of whether they can be militarized. And this is a scenario that is kind of scary. We talk about the fact that we have our largest military base there, which is, as you said, insane. Can you just comment on that possibility where this is another dimension, another threat to this? Because every week it seems we have to re-evaluate which is the number one enemy? Dr. Levitt, could you start? Mr. Levitt. So I haven't seen this report, so I don't want to comment on a report I haven't seen, other than to say the North Korea issue is a very important pressing issue. In some ways, it is much more important than this one, to be sure. But in general, I think we need to learn ways to be able to leverage conversation, and if necessary, pressure on Qatar on a wide array of issues that we have with them. And this would be one more. And you have to do that in a way that is flexible, because we have many very positive relationships with Qatar. I would argue the way to be flexible, though, is not to say it is perfectly okay to have X number of North Koreans in the country working in ways we don't know, or to host anybody you want from Hamas. Certainly, for example, I would make a difference between hosting certain leaders of Hamas who are sitting in a hotel room, as opposed to people like Saad al- Hariri, who is now believed to be in Lebanon but was sitting comfortably in Qatar for quite some time where he was literally plotting attacks against Israelis civilians. That should be completely beyond the pale. Again, I haven't seen this report, but this would be another thing that we have to figure out how do we have multiple conversations with a country at the same time on some issues you have agreement, on some issues you have great disagreement. I think we have done that very poorly across administrations. Mr. Cook. Okay. Any others want to comment on this? Doctor? Mr. Schanzer. I will comment for a moment, sir. I think it is important to talk about when you talk about foreign workers in Qatar. The 3,000 that you mentioned are actually--it is a very small number, relatively speaking, in relation to this 800,000-plus foreign workers that are active right now in Qatar. I have seen the reports of the North Korean workers there. The concern actually was not that they would be potentially operational, but rather, that they were effectively slave labor. Mr. Cook. Yes, exactly. Mr. Schanzer. It was given to the Qataris, and that whatever they were being paid was being remitted back to North Korea, and that this was an inadvertent way, or a backdoor way of financing North Korea. So these are the concerns that we have. I believe that the Qataris have addressed this problem last I heard. I have not seen a lot of updates on this. Mr. Cook. The reason I ask that question, because we are having the debate and everything else about the sanctions against North Korea, and this might be another variable that would be included in this. Any comments on what happened last year? I was over in that area, and the State Department was, quite frankly, at that time--this is about a year ago, maybe a year and a half--they were arguing on behalf of Qatar for the upgrade for the F-15s. They thought it would be in the best interest. And I was kind of shocked at that in terms of foreign military sales. Do you have any comment on that? I almost--when I was there, viewed it as almost Middle East Stockholm syndrome, because they were very, very supportive of Qatar with all its problems, and it kind of shocked me at least from a military standpoint. Doctor? Either one? Mr. Goldenberg. Sir, I actually had served in the Pentagon for a few years on the Middle East issues, so I can maybe talk a little about this. From my perspective, look, I mean, this is a problem we have with all the Gulf states. On the one hand, I mean, the arm sales are very useful to our industry---- Mr. Cook. Yes. I understand that. But I am talking about the F-15 upgrade. This is a significant--I understand your expertise in the Pentagon. I have spent a few years in the military myself, although I certainly cannot fly an airplane. But in regards to that particular weapon system, which is kind of more sophisticated than some of the others. Mr. Goldenberg. Well, sir, I was just going to say that my issue with--I can't tell you about that specific weapon system, and that specific upgrade. I can tell you that, generally, I think we have an issue where we probably sell these countries too much weaponry because they have the money. And what they really need is, sort of, lower-end technology to deal with counterterrorism problems and things like that, which are much more important, I think, for their interest and ours. Mr. Cook. Thank you very much. I yield back. Mrs. Wagner. The gentleman's time expired. The Chair now recognizes the gentleman from California, Mr. Lieu, for 5 minutes. Mr. Lieu. Thank you, Madam Chair. On June 9, our Secretary of State, Rex Tillerson, stated, ``We call on the king of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Egypt to ease the blockade on Qatar.'' Later that same exact day, Donald Trump referred to the decision to initiate the blockade as hard but necessary. And then, as you know, a few days later, the United States sells $12 million of fighter jets to Qatar. So my question is to the panel, what is your understanding of the current U.S. position on this so-called blockade? Do we support it? Do we oppose it? What is the answer to that? Mr. Goldenberg. I will start, I guess. And I think others also have comments. From my perspective, I think we have a disagreement inside the administration, and for the most part, have seen this disagreement. I am not 100 percent sure. I do think that what it does do, it causes some confusion, because you can't really--Secretary Tillerson is clearly trying to act as a mediator, and he is going out there and trying to do that. He had a trip just last week, or a couple of weeks back to do that. And meanwhile, you have some of these other comments coming from elsewhere, so the Qataris will then go to the Secretary of State, and the Secretary of Defense would seem to have positions more in line with their own, and the Emiratis and the Saudis and others will go the White House, who seems to have positions more in line with their own. And that is really not an effective way to sort of try to conduct and mediate this conflict. I think it is causing some problems. So I would say it is ambiguous right now what the policy is. Mr. Lieu. So let me ask you another question. There have been various media reports that the Trump organization has lots of businesses in Saudi Arabia and some of these other countries but not Qatar. Do you think that plays any role, or could it? Mr. Goldenberg. Honestly, Congressman, I don't know. I don't know their motivation, what is behind it. Mr. Lieu. That is fine. I will ask you another question. There have been various reports that Jared Kushner basically got stiffed by some folks in Qatar. Do you think this could play any role in that? Mr. Goldenberg. It is certainly a possibility, but it is not something that I, again, have any knowledge of. Mr. Lieu. Thank you. Let me move on to a question I had mentioned in my opening statement. Are there families being separated because of this so- called blockade based on their national origin, or any panel member? Mr. Goldenberg. My understanding is at least that, yes, there are issues where the Qataris and the--we have a lot of people who are moving between the Qataris, the Emiratis and the various GCC states, and so you are going to end up in situations where all GC--all, I believe, Qatari nationals had 2 weeks to get out of certain GCC states. Mr. Lieu. So you would be separating husband and wife from each other if they happen to be a different national origins, correct? Mr. Goldenberg. That is what I have seen in the press. Beyond that, you know--and I have heard concerns about that, but I can't really speak for their policy, obviously. Mr. Lieu. Okay. I have met with various representatives from these Gulf state countries, including Saudi Arabia and Qatar. One of the things that the residents from Qatar said is with respect to Taliban, they said it is true there is a Taliban office in Qatar, but that the U.S. asked them to open it. Is that true? Anyone on the panel. Mr. Schanzer. I will maybe take a first stab at that one. As I understand it, there was a Taliban presence that was already there in Doha, that there were representatives of the Taliban who had come there before the opening of this office. Then came the initiative by the Obama administration to negotiate with the Taliban in an attempt to find pragmatic members of the group. And so, they essentially authorized what became the Taliban Embassy. As I mentioned in my testimony, this was something that was very frustrating to those within the Afghan Government, who were struggling for their own recognition of legitimacy. They felt that this undermined them, and I have heard this from a number of U.S. officials on both sides of the aisle. What happened after that was the trade for Bowe Bergdahl, the American serviceman who had gone missing in Afghanistan, and he was traded for the Taliban Five. This was facilitated by the Qataris. The Taliban Five are high ranking Taliban officials and operatives, ultimately came to Qatar as well, and so they augmented the presence that had already been there. And since that time, the concern has been not just that there has been an official presence of the Taliban inside Doha, but rather also Taliban officials, Taliban militants, have come in and they have reconnected with the Taliban Five and some of the others. So there is concern that it is not just that the presence that was first blessed by the Obama administration, but that there have been some operational concerns as well. Mr. Lieu. Thank you, and I yield back. Mrs. Wagner. The gentleman yields back. The Chair now recognizes the gentleman from New York, Mr. Zeldin, for 5 minutes. Mr. Zeldin. Thank you, Madam Chairwoman. This is a question for anyone who is able to answer. Does Qatar view Hamas as a terrorist organization? Or I can--maybe a multiple choice, or does Qatar view Hamas as a legitimate resistance, or would you give it some other characterization? How does the Government of Qatar view Hamas? Mr. Schanzer. Maybe I will start. The Government of Qatar does not see Hamas as a terrorist organization. It sees the violence that Hamas carries out as being legitimate, and it continues to insist that overall, the critique that has been leveled at the Qataris over the last several weeks as this crisis has unfolded, they continue to say that they do not agree with the definition of terrorism that their critics are using. Again, I see this as a very poor defense. They know exactly how we view the problem, and they are allies of the United States. They are hosting our air base. They know the difference between right and wrong, at least in the way that the West views it, and they refuse to recognize it, and that is one of the problems that we have. And I think, maybe just a post script, that if this is the case with Hamas, who else might they view differently? How do they view the Taliban? We just talked about the base. How do they view the Nusra front? Do they see them as terrorists? Probably not. And so what we see is a growing list of actors where we would disagree on whether they are legitimate or illegitimate, terrorists or not terrorists. Mr. Zeldin. Does anyone disagree with that? What options do we have, if at all, to get Qatar to change their view of Hamas as a legitimate resistance? Mr. Levitt. Like in the first instance, there are already reports that Qatar has asked at least six Hamas members to leave the country. That is good. That means some pressure works. So long as there is no consequence, this is a no-brainer for Qatar. Qatar is a small but rich country, and if it wants to box out of its weight class, it can either spend money or do other things that make it more of a player. It has been able to make itself more of a player in part by reaching out to Islamist groups that are beyond the pale for most. And, therefore, being a key intermediary, we collectively, especially coming right after the European Court of Justice's ruling just now upholding the EU's designation of all of Hamas, not some wings and others but all of it, we in the West collectively need to make it clear to Qatar that hosting and providing services to a group that is committed to the destruction of a U.N. member state and to civilians is unacceptable. And I put that in a different basket from Qatar's support to citizens in Gaza, which the Israelis fully support. In fact, it is done through Israel. That is a different issue. If Qatar wants to be a responsible player in that regard, fine, but hosting and providing safe haven to the leaders of a U.S.- and EU-designated terrorist group is a problem. Mr. Zeldin. Has Qatar weighed in, to the best of your knowledge, with regards to the U.S. moving its Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem? Are you aware of the nature of Qatar helping in the mission to defeat ISIS? Mr. Goldenberg. Well, I think that, yes, in that Qatar hosts, you know, our forces at Al Udeid Air Base, which is where the--you know, we have the CAOC, which is the central coordinating function that then allows--basically is responsible for coordinating all of our operations in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Syria, and especially Iraq and Syria, where ISIS is primarily based, you know as a central element of our strategy, and you know I just would---- Mr. Zeldin. I really should have clarified. I mean, other than the obvious that, you know, we have a base there, but the nature of these relationships with other terrorist organizations, and they are very welcoming to just about everyone, it seems, in the region. So, outside of the obvious, what other--what can we add, what could you add as far as Qatar's other efforts? Not supporting, not allowing us to operate there, but what else are they doing? Mr. Levitt. I am not entirely sure I understand the question, but Qatar is a member of the counter-ISIS coalition. Its commitment has been somewhat limited. It has flown some missions, but it has refused to drop bombs, so it has flown behind other airplanes in case something happens to them. That it is not nothing, but it is not as much as others. I think the biggest issue is that now across administrations of different political persuasions we have been more interested in getting another number to add to the number of coalition members adding Qatar without insisting that, to be a part of it, you also have to meet a certain threshold. And it seems crazy to me they should be able to be part of the counter-ISIL coalition while still supporting other equally dangerous radical Islamist groups like al-Qaeda in Syria. Mr. Zeldin. I would love to get into that further, but I notice that I am out of time, so I have to yield back. Mrs. Wagner. The gentleman yields back. The Chair now recognizes the gentlelady from Hawaii, Ms. Gabbard, for 5 minutes. Ms. Gabbard. Thank you. Thank you, gentlemen. I am wondering if you can address the double standard that exists and that we are confronted with with all of this attention being focused on Qatar with different members of the administration very strongly calling out Qatar for its support of terrorism, yet on the same--almost in the same breath embracing Saudi Arabia and lauding their counterterrorism efforts, when I think some of you have mentioned in your opening comments Saudi Arabia's long history of supporting terrorism and exporting the Wahhabi Salafist ideology around the world that really creates these fertile recruiting grounds for terrorist groups like al-Qaeda and ISIS--what to speak of Saudi Arabia and Turkey's support of different terrorist groups in places like Syria, Saudi support for al-Qaeda in Yemen and their fight in Yemen. So all of this attention is focused on Qatar with very little if no passing mention of Saudi Arabia's role in all of this. Mr. Schanzer. I want to make sure my colleague Matt Levitt gets a moment to speak, but maybe just a couple of quick thoughts. Number one, you mentioned Turkey. I think that probably a whole other hearing should be done on Turkey that the same sorts of behaviors that we are seeing exhibited by the Qataris we have seen with the Turks and we have seen them in very similar ways. In fact, I think it was just yesterday, I don't know if he is still there, but the President of Turkey, Mr. Erdogan, was in Doha, and they are strategic partners. And I think we need to address this. And I think I mentioned before that the Incirlik Air Base, we have very similar issues with Incirlik that we do with Al Udeid. I see them really as mirror images of one another. The Turks host a Hamas base. They have been known to open up their borders to allow for Nusrah fighters to go back and forth, possibly ISIS fighters, as well, so there is a lot of problems with the Turks that I think probably deserve some attention. Ms. Gabbard. I agree. Mr. Schanzer. Then I think the other thing that both Matt and I mentioned today is the problem of Kuwait. The fact that Kuwait has become a mediator in this is somewhat ridiculous, that the Kuwaitis have been identified time and again by our former and current colleagues at the Treasury Department that Kuwait is a huge problem when it comes to terror finance probably rivaling that of Qatar, and so that should be addressed. As for Saudi Arabia, I would agree with the assessment that it has turned a corner. It is not out of the woods, but it has gotten a lot better. It is not best in breed. I think that distinction probably goes to the Emirates right now in the Gulf states, but they still have their problems, too. What I started to say at the beginning of my testimony and prepared remarks is that all of these--the entire Gulf is a problematic region. I think the Saudis were seen as the number one producer of radicalism and radical ideology. I think it has been eclipsed, and as they are trying--it looks as though, right now, they are looking to get better at this. And they still have problems with teaching radicalism and spreading radicalism, but as they improve, we are seeing some of these other countries double down. And Qatar I think has really been the most prominent among them. Ms. Gabbard. I think--and I have got about a minute and a half if others want to comment--but the issue of Saudi Arabia, we have heard that, yes, they are making progress, and, yes, there is change occurring, but I and others have asked this administration for very specific examples, data, benchmarks, changes, and to date, we have not gotten any kind of specifics, either in writing or in person. And, frankly, what we have gotten is a lot of lip service. So, you know, the question of how long this has been going on with Saudi Arabia casts a huge amount of doubt on saying, yeah, okay, well we think they are improving in this. Mr. Levitt. I will just add that Qatar in the here and now, right now, is doing things that have to stop. There is no question---- Ms. Gabbard. I agree. Mr. Levitt [continuing]. That the Saudis for a very long time did a whole lot of things that not only caused problems then but are still causing problems now. And I am not going make excuses for them. They have turned corners, and I can't explain why the administration wouldn't provide some information about that, which is not to say that there is not a lot more that they could do. But as several members of the committee have said, several of you have been approached by different members of GCC states recently, So have those of us in think tanks. And I have mentioned to some of my Saudi and Emirati colleagues in particular: Beware pushing too hard on general ideas of extremism, because it is not like you haven't had problems of your own. Beware of pushing too hard on the issue of the Taliban in Qatar, UAE, because for a period of time, Taliban officials were strolling into Dubai with suitcases of cash, and so long as that was invested in real estate, no one cared. So the UAE and the Saudis, despite what they have done in the past, have turned corners. We need Qatar to do the same. We shouldn't expect that Qatar will suddenly be perfect in the same way that its neighbors are not yet perfect, but we cannot tolerate some of the most egregious behavior that they have done even, as I said in written and oral testimony, some of the charges that have been arrayed against them are simply untrue, but some of them are very true. Ms. Gabbard. Thank you. Mrs. Wagner. The gentlelady's time has expired. The Chair now recognizes the gentleman from Florida, Mr. Mast, for, 5 minutes. Mr. Mast. I want to thank you for taking the time to come here and sit with us today. I want to get to something very quickly. You know, we have been discussing the support of terror from different actors. Terrorism--I have heard it said before, terrorism isn't an enemy. Terrorism is a tactic that is used by an enemy. So, to that end, I would like to hear from each one of you, what is it that you think is trying to be achieved by the tactic of supporting--by supporting that tactic, by supporting terror? What is the end that each one of you see as being played out? Mr. Levitt. So, as answered to another question, I think Qatar is trying to make itself a bigger player in the world stage than it otherwise would be by being a small peninsula, almost an island, of a very small population. A vast majority of people on the island are foreign workers. But it happens to be very, very wealthy, the wealthiest nation on planet earth per capita, and it has also found another way to kind of punch beyond its weight, and that is through making relationships with other Islamist groups that it has been able to use to its own benefit and sometimes being out to reach out to others and say: Hey, I can be a middle man for you too. That has proved to be very, very dangerous. And so Qatar has never had a situation where there was a cost to having the kind of relationship it wants and needs with us, which we would like to have with them too, at the same time they are having very close relationships with some of the worst of the worst. Mr. Mast. Mr. Schanzer? Mr. Goldenberg? Mr. Schanzer. I agree with Matt. I think that, overall, Qatar realizes that it is extremely vulnerable, that it is tiny, and that it doesn't have the means to push back on some of its very tough neighbors. It shares natural gas wealth with the Iranians, and they have to figure out how to get along. And so having some of these proxies available to them is a useful thing. By the way, so is having an American air base where they can sort of bare their teeth at the Iranians. But at the end of the day, what they are trying to do or what has happened over time is they have become very wealthy, and they have tried to use whatever means they have to purchase power. And so you see them buying up large chunks of London, large chunks of Washington. You see them paying for proxies across the Middle East, trying to push the Muslim Brotherhood into positions of power so that they, too, would be able to ride the waves of power. This is a lot of what drives them right now.I think they have taken this way too far. Mr. Goldenberg. And just to add, and I agree a lot of what Jonathan and Matt have said, Qatar is also just traditionally pursued sort of a third way foreign policy in the Gulf. You know, a lot of the smaller Gulf states choose to align themselves with Saudi Arabia. Qatar basically, since 1995, when there was a turnover and a sort of a palace coup and the emir took over, the father of the current emir chose a different approach which involved not just going along with the Saudis. And if you are a very small country with a much bigger one sitting right next to you who sort of is running a lot of the region, if you are going to go with that contrary policy, you try to find every division that you can and every opportunity that you can to influence. And so it builds relationships oftentimes with other actors. I think this is also is part of the reason they have a slightly different approach to Iran, which is probably a little more accommodationist, although I think that it also has a lot to do with sharing the gas field, as Jonathan said. So I think this is--it is, partially, it is about increasing their influence, but it is also about increasing their influence and being independent of Saudi Arabia within the context of the GCC. Mr. Mast. Okay. So you have each mentioned what you thought to the end was, and we are talking about terrorism, support of terror. We are talking about a very kinetic action. We are not talking about something cyber. We are not talking about something economic. We are talking about a very kinetic action. So, in that, being that Qatar has been purchasing foreign military or our military equipment to the tune of $10 billion in 2014, $17 billion in 2015, what is the jump that you make connecting the dots to that end? Do you make a jump there? Do you fear moving from the tactic of terror to a conventional tactic? Is that the assessment that you make? Mr. Levitt. No. They are still a small country. They don't want to get into a fight with anybody. I think, in their mind also, this is not a kinetic. They are just supporting groups, and they make a distinction in their own mind this kind of cognitive dissonance between other things they might be doing. They are supporting the political office of Hamas in their mind. They are supporting Islamists who are effective in fighting Assad and nothing else in their mind. It is not quite so simple, but that is what I--I don't think this is at all a threat of regular military-military conflict. Mr. Schanzer. I would just add, when you look at Qatar--and we have been having this conversation for the last, you know, hour-plus--I think it is important to note that Qatar is a country of roughly 300,000 people. It is tiny. It has more foreign workers in the country than actual nationals. They are incredibly vulnerable. They are not picking a fight directly with anyone, and this is why they have chosen that soft power approach. They bring the conflict away from them. They cause problems for other people that only they can solve. This is the Qatari way. Mr. Mast. My time has expired. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen [presiding]. Thank you so much, Mr. Mast. And God has granted me another opportunity to make good on the pronunciation of Mr. Suozzi's name, so I am pleased to yield time to Mr. Suozzi of New York. Mr. Suozzi. Thank you, Madam Chairwoman. I am going to pick up on something you just said about 300,000 people that live in Qatar. And I am going to change my line of questioning based on that. There are 1.5 billion Muslims in the world, and the challenge that we face in today's world is--you know, most Muslims don't participate in this awful, horrific activity of terrorism and trying to promote terrorism and extremism and violence, and the challenge is, you know, who is winning in this battle to try and promote extremism and violence? And, you know, there are 750,000 Muslims that live in Indonesia, Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh. The other 750--what did I say 750 million, did I say that? Another 750 million who live outside of those countries. So the question is: Things are dynamic. Congresswoman Gabbard was talking about, you know, Saudi Arabia's activities over decades and promoting Wahhabism and building madrassas and promoting extremism all over the world, but things are dynamic and things are changing. And some people are moving closer to our way of thinking, not to promote violence and extremism, and some people are moving further away and continuing to promote violence and extremism. So where would you place Qatar on where they are right now? Mr. Schanzer. It is a great question, and I would say they have got one foot in one camp and one foot in the other. And this is really what is maddening about Qatar. All right. So, on the one hand, they are hosting our forward air base, and they are a vital partner on the war on terrorism, and they are investing through their sovereign wealth. They are investing here in the U.S. and across the West. They are investing in legitimate investments, and they have provided a crucial service in terms of providing hard capital, especially when things got rough about a decade ago; they were there, and they were helping. The problem is, is that they have used that as leverage. So, when we come to them and we talk to them about their support for the various groups that we have mentioned, the jihadists in Syria, the jihadists in Libya, the Taliban and Hamas, and we go and we talk to them about this, they just don't listen. Mr. Suozzi. So, if the people from Qatar wanted to clearly demonstrate to us that they are moving away from promoting any kind of extremism and they are moving closer to our way of thinking, the West way of thinking, what would be the two or three things that they would have to do to demonstrate that in a clear way? Mr. Schanzer. We should be providing Qatar with a list of people that they should expel. It should include people who are part of the Taliban, part of Hamas, part of these various Syrian jihadi groups. Let me put it this way: I have heard from diplomats in Doha that the Qataris can't do that because it would really upset the Qatari population, that it would really be very unpopular. We are talking about 300,000 people who live in an absolute monarchy. If the emir wants them gone, they will be gone. It is that simple. And we can ask. Mr. Suozzi. Okay. I only have 1 minute and 55 seconds left, so Dr. Levitt? Mr. Levitt. We are not talking about 300,000 people when we are talking about the problems in Qatar. We are talking about a much, much, much smaller number. In fact, when it comes to the al-Qaeda financiers, we are talking about probably two to three dozen people max that we are truly concerned about. And we are talking about a small number of people in government who need to act. So this is actually--one of the reasons it is so frustrating is it is so doable. This is an absolute monarchy. They have a respectable security service. They have no tolerance for this type of activity targeting them within the kingdom, but so long as activity that is happening within the kingdom is targeting others, they are okay if it gives them some type of leverage. We need to make clear that there is more leverage to be had in having a wholesome relationship with us, with the Europeans, with the West, and that there are consequences in terms of that relationship if they don't. This is fixable. Mr. Goldenberg. If I can just add one point, Congressman. I think this crisis actually gives us an opportunity to build some leverage and go to all of these countries, to go to the Qataris and say: Okay, here is our list. You really want our support in this crisis? Like we need to see your action on this. And also to go against the Saudis and the Emirates and--it is the exact same thing. Mr. Suozzi. I agree with that. Mr. Goldenberg. And so I think there is this real opportunity now, you know, as sort of the silver lining of this crisis of having our partners all at each other's throats instead of focusing on what we would want to see them focus on because I would rather see them more focused on Iran--I would rather see them focused on the counterISIS fight, not in spending their time in Washington trying to get all of us, you know, on their side--but hereis an opportunity. Let's turn it on them and say: Let's see all of you live up, here is the standard we want to go by, and we want all the countries of the Gulf to go by this standard, and here is what we expect from you. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Yes, please, go right ahead. Mr. Levitt. I realize we are over, but along these lines, there is a mechanism to do that. At the Riyadh summit, we created something called the Terror Finance Tracking Center. There is no meat on those bones yet. No one knows, including the Secretary of the Treasury who just testified about it, no one really knows what that is going to be yet, but it is a potential structure. We could put some meat on those bones. That is a GCC-wide effort, and we should be acting and demanding participation from all the GCC countries because these are problems that are happening within all of them, even if Qatar and Kuwait are the biggest problems right now. Mr. Suozzi. So thank you, Madam Chair. You know, there is a real battle in the world going on between stability and instability, and it is not necessarily ideology. It is criminals that are participating in murder and extortion and kidnapping and drug dealing and trying to promote extremism ideology. And it is not a group; it is individuals, as you are pointing out, that we need to target. Thank you. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Thank you, sir. And now we turn to Mr. Issa of California. Mr. Issa. Thank you, Madam Chair. Just for the record briefly, Mr. Schanzer, last time you were in the administration? Mr. Schanzer. Ten years ago. Mr. Issa. Ten years ago, Bush, right? So, Levitt, last time? Mr. Levitt. Bush. Mr. Issa. Mr. Goldenberg, State Department, when? Mr. Goldenberg. 2014. Mr. Issa. Okay. So very recently, all facts considered. So all of you have been in a position that this committee oversees. We actually don't oversee Qatar. We don't oversee Kuwait. We oversee the places you were. So I am going tell you a story. It is a Bush era story. Sixteen years ago there was a hearing in this room, and we were evaluating the incredibly unreasonable activities of Kazakhstan, because they had the audacity to want to sell their MiG-21s to a hostile nation. The other side of the story was they had come to the State Department, they had come to our Government in the Bush administration, and they said: Look, we are a poor country. We are trying to become a rich country. We have got oil. We want to turn--we want to turn these weapons into plowshares. We want to actually sell them off. We are not replacing them. We simply want to raise some cash. And they said: Who can we sell them to? Mr. Goldenberg, oddly enough, State said: We can't give you a list. Clearly Lockheed wasn't interested in buying them unless they were trade-ins and neither was Boeing or others. So my question to you is--each of you--because I have been through these hearings on country after country, and we are going to see whether it is the Palestinian Authority and including Hamas, whether it is Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, we are going to keep having these hearings, and we are always going to find one thing. Money is leaking to bad people from within these countries, either by individuals or, in fact, there may be a nexus to the government in some way. What I want to know is, what are each of you prepared to do and should this administration do under our auspices--and I think, Mr. Schanzer, you alluded to this--to make a list of who you can give to, to make list of who you want out, to make list--in other words, how do we get the administration to set solid, predictable standards, so we know it is not a mixed message, please? Mr. Schanzer. Thank you, Congressman. What I would say is, A, I think we can provide lists and say these people shouldn't be here or they should be in jail and that you need to take action. And I think that is a very, you know, straightforward approach. There are other things that I mentioned. Mr. Issa. And I will commit that if you provide that list I will forward, and I hope my chairperson will actually do it on my behalf, but I will commit to forward it to the administration asking them, have they and will they make that request? Mr. Schanzer. We will take you up on that. What I would also add, though, is there are other ways of putting pressure on countries like Qatar that don't involve the individuals themselves but that make it more painful. So I mentioned the STORM Act, which was introduced in the Senate. Mr. Issa. Right. Mr. Schanzer. And is yet to be introduced in the House, but this would potentially label Qatar and/or any other country a jurisdiction of terrorism finance concern, which would then have a chilling effect on those who would be interested in doing commerce. Mr. Issa. But my question was more narrow. It is, how do we get, like those lists, specifics to the administration? One of the challenges we have: We pass these various acts, and then there gets to be all kind of debate about it. But what I think I have heard throughout the day, both here and when I was in the back, is that there are specific asks that we should be asking countries to do, including in this case Qatar. Now there are things that they can't undo. The emir visiting Hamas and giving money for a hospital, we can't unring any of that. We can only feel that it was not helpful, to say the least. So one of my questions to each of you with the limited time is, can you briefly tell us additional acts, and can you agree to give us lists of things that you believe we should work with the administration to get done? My hope is that it will not be pass a law that ties this and future administration's hands, but, rather, things you know should be done that we need to ask them, why aren't they doing it? Mr. Levitt. So to be perfectly blunt, sir---- Mr. Issa. I love blunt. Mr. Levitt. I know you do. They know, because we have told them. I am happy--I will speak for all three of us. We are happy to provide you information. We have a Treasury attache in Doha. He works real hard all the time. This new MOU is going to send a Department of Justice OPDAT official, a prosecutor, to help them with the prosecutions. There is no question about the names, not only because we have designated many, because we have this very open conversation with them many times. In one of my recent conversations with the senior Qatari official, the official said to me: Look, Matt, you are former FBI. We need the FBI to tell us. I said: No, sir. You have a really good security service. I know because I have worked with you in the past. I know that our people are working with you on a regular basis. You know that I know that you know exactly who we are talking about. And, therefore, it is frustrating, as I mentioned earlier, when a senior Qatari official says just yesterday: All of the terror financier subjects in our country have been subject to prosecution. That is not true, nor is prosecution the only tool in the tool chest. So I would argue that the problem here is not the lists. The problem here is that they refuse to do it, and we haven't had any type of consequence for that because we need them for other things. We want them for other things, but we have to be able to balance that. Mr. Issa. Well, that is why I believe our list forwarded will have more of a, why not? And I want you to answer, but my question was broader. It wasn't just Qatar. It is very clear that we have similar requests from other allies or semi-allies throughout the Gulf, yes. Mr. Goldenberg. Thank you, Congressman. Just one quick point. I know we are over time, but I think one thing the committee could do is, for example, ask for a report on what it would mean to actually diversify away from the Qatari air base, not because I necessarily recommend doing that. I actually think it would end up being very expensive and difficult, and if we can, we should could keep that base. It is a valuable asset. But I also don't think it is a point of leverage to the point that we just mindlessly say, ``Well, we are just going to keep doing this because we are doing it right now,'' and it keeps a gun to our head. And I think, unless you sort of push the Pentagon or the State Department to at least start creatively thinking about alternatives, the answer you will always get from any administration is, ``We have zero leverage here, we need this space,'' which is isn't actually the case. So that would be another area which would also I think send an interesting---- Mr. Issa. Thank you, Madam Chair. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Thank you, Mr. Issa. And now we turn to Mr. Cicilline of Rhode Island. Mr. Cicilline. Thank you, Madam Chairman. Thank you to our witnesses for your testimony. Dr. Levitt, I just want to just start with you. You served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Treasury and so you understand the critical role that our agencies play in advancing and implementing U.S. foreign policy, and as I am hearing your testimony, it just reminds me how disturbing it is and how much more complicated it is that this administration has not only called for a 30-percent cut in funding to the State Department but has left really important positions vacant and without nominees. At a moment that we are trying to manage this crisis and this very serious conflict in the Middle East, we are still waiting on nominees for the Assistant Secretary for Near Eastern Affairs and USAID Assistant Administrator for the Middle East, and at a time when terror groups continue to talk about efforts to pursue weapons of mass destruction, it is really baffling to me that we would leave vacant the position of Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security. I take it you all are equally mystified by that? Mr. Levitt. It would be much better if we had these positions filled. Mr. Cicilline. Great. Thank you. I want to first talk about Turkey. One of the demands on Qatar has been to close the Turkish military base located in Qatar, and Turkey has responded, of course, by bolstering its military presence as a strong show of support. And my question really is, is this a real demand? What is the purpose of it? And what would be the implications if this base closed? Mr. Schanzer. I will let Ilan speak in a sec, but what I would just say is you have to understand: We talk about the politics of this region, and overall, these countries are upset with Qatar for its financing of Muslim Brotherhood groups across the Arab world. And they see it as a challenge to their view of the region, in which they would like to maintain something of the status quo. The Turks have been strategic partners with the Qataris. There is no question about it. And so they see this as doubling down on that sort of Muslim Brotherhood Axis, if you will, and so they see it as a threat. I don't think they want to open up another front on this. I think they are focusing on Qatar for a reason, but when you speak to representatives of these countries, they will tell you that they see the Turks as perhaps second in line in terms of a challenge to the regional order that they seek. Mr. Cicilline. And is your assessment that this has pushed Qatar closer to Turkey, this blockade? Mr. Schanzer. Oh, they didn't need to be any closer. They were already strategic partners, but now I think--I mean, as I see it right now, Qatar has very few friends, so they have reached out to the Turks, and they have drawn closer to the Turks. And alarmingly, they also appear to have drawn closer to the Iranians, which is one of the things that Qatar's adversaries were warning about in the first place. Mr. Goldenberg. Congressman, if I can add one point on Turkey, there was this initial list of 13 demands by the countries that implemented the blockade. That list has since been narrowed down to six and was last week in a statement that they put out, and the Turkish base is no longer on that list of demands. And so I think that the Turkey issue is an issue for them precisely for the reasons that Jonathan talked about, but it is, I think, a lesser priority for them than some of the issues on counterterror financing, their concerns about whether Qatar's meddling in their own internal affairs, which they consistently talk about Al Jazeera, things like that I think really what they care alot more about than the Turkey issue. And on Iran, I would only add I think it is true that, yeah, Qatar has a more accommodationist approach than some of the other Gulf states, but I think there is a real mix across the Gulf on Iran that is important to recognize. The GCC--if anything, we have learned from this crisis, the GCC is not homogeneous. The Saudis take the hardest line on Iran. Even within the UAE, Abu Dhabi takes a hard line; Dubai much less so in terms of trade. So, you know, I do think there is this diversity of views. Oman obviously played a very different role on Iran, more as a mediator, particularly during the nuclear talks. Mr. Cicilline. I would like to follow up on Iran. The Qataris have obviously been trying to counter Iran's strategically while at the same time trying to kind of continue to maintain a dialogue with their Iranian counterparts. What do you think is the rationale for that decision and the kind of long-term implications? Mr. Goldenberg. So I think they are a country of 300,000 people, as we have talked about, and all of their wealth--the majority of their wealth comes from this huge gas field that they share with the Iranians. You know, they own half of it; the Iranians have the other half. So this is a reality of geopolitics that they are living with, and you are never going to get them to, I think, pull away completely. At the same time, at least my engagement with Qatari Government officials, you don't hear a lot of love for the Iranians necessarily. You do hear some angst, but they are not going to take a hard-line approach like the Saudis. I just don't think they can afford to, given like the position that they are in. Mr. Schanzer. I would agree with that. I think a lot of this is driven by the Qatari need for survival. But I have heard from some of our friends in the region in recent months a concern that the Muslim Brotherhood and Iran are not exactly at odds with one another. I think we have this sort of preconceived notion that, because the Muslim Brotherhood is a Sunni organization, a Sunni network, it is fundamentally at odds with Iran. That has not been the case historically. Looking just at Hamas, for example, you have this confluence of both Qatari support and Iranian support there, so there may be more than meets the eye, and this is, I think, something that is worthy of perhaps additional research. Mr. Cicilline. Thank you so much. I yield back. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Thank you so much, Mr. Cicilline. Mr. Rohrabacher of California. Mr. Rohrabacher. Thank you very much, and I appreciated your insights that you have provided us today. I have got a long history in dealing with Qatar and with those other countries. I have been here 30 years now, and I worked with the White House before I got here. And what I--I can't help but lament that things seem to be going in the opposite direction than what we had as a positive potential 20 and 30 years ago. It really did look like Qatar and some other countries in that region were going to go in a more positive direction, and now what we see is basically they are--schizophrenia on their part trying to play both sides against all sides, or these people think that they can just juggle. They think they are the world's greatest jugglers in that they can handle both groups of enemies and friends. So let me ask this: When you talk to the people from Qatar, and I have, and they will tell you every time that they--and, again, one other--there was one question earlier on this--that they were asked to bring in the Taliban, that they were asked to bring in al-Qaeda and Hezbollah and these various groups, by the United States Government. Did--even during the last administration, did we indeed ask them to bring in the Taliban and have a greater opportunity for the Taliban to use their area there in Qatar as a base of dealing with the world? Mr. Goldenberg. So I didn't work--I was in the last administration, but I did not work on issues having to do with the Taliban. Mr. Rohrabacher. Can anyone answer that question? They are telling us we asked them to do it. Did we ask them to do it? Mr. Goldenberg. But I do think--I can answer, from my understanding, which is I do think we asked them to do it, but I do think it also goes back to this point that part of the reason we asked them to do it is because the Taliban were already operating there in some form or capacity already. Mr. Rohrabacher. So there is some verification that perhaps the United States Government did ask them to get involved with some of these what we consider to be terrorist elements. We know that the deal for the Taliban Five leaders, terrorist leaders, were traded for one traitor to our Government, and which I thought was the worst raw deal that we could have ever possibly have gotten, that was something our administration did, and it would happen via Qatar. Now, let me just ask this, and I am going to be very pointed here, and, look, the Clinton Foundation has received millions of dollars of contributions, we know, from Russian oligarchs. Is there any--how much has the Clinton Foundation received from Qatar? Do we know of any--or maybe Qatar has not given any money to the foundation. Is that right? Mr. Levitt. None of us have those figures, but I just want to correct one thing. There is some debate as to what the United States might have asked Qatar to do or not regarding the Taliban, and I think it is now clear. They asked Qatar to allow this office to be open since the Taliban was already there, but this was not Hamas. You had mentioned Hamas. This was not Hezbollah. This was not al-Qaeda. Mr. Rohrabacher. I am sorry. I have 1 minute left, and let me just note, Madam Chairman---- Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. You have more time. Don't worry about it. Mr. Rohrabacher. Okay. Well, I think it would be fitting, Madam Chairman, that we make a request to find out if Qatar has been the source of major donations to the Clinton Foundation, and if, indeed, our Government, during the time when Hillary Clinton was our Secretary of State, did indeed ask Qatar to permit some of these what we consider terrorist organizations into their country. This needs to be looked at very closely because we know that the Clinton Foundation was certainly in Russia receiving tens of millions of dollars from Russian oligarchs. Let's just note that whether it is al-Qaeda or the Muslim Brotherhood, the jihadists and Hezbollah, Qatar has to make its choice. And by the way, just one point that was made here earlier: I do not consider the rebuilding of Gaza to be a positive act. If, indeed, the Palestinians are shooting rockets into Israel and Israel retaliates, for Qatar just to step forward and to rebuild everything that has been destroyed by Israeli retaliation, what we are really doing is encouraging the people in Gaza to permit the shooting of rockets from their territory into Israel. No, the fact is that, if, indeed, Israel is retaliating against an attack, we should not be cleaning up the mess. Those people who actually permitted the attacks in the first place should be paying a price for it. Because we don't want attacks. We want there to be peace. This is the two-state solution was supposed to come out of this, and instead, the Palestinians ever since then have just been shooting rockets and creating terrorist attacks against Israel. Now let's discourage that by not rebuilding their buildings if they have been destroyed as a retaliation against this type of terrorist attack on Israel. Let me just say again, and I agree with this, that this has not been a hearing about all the rest of these states. Frankly, I don't find Qatar any worse than our Saudi friends, and there is, again, schizophrenia going on there. But we look at the Muslim Brotherhood and the impact that it is having throughout that region, and we realize that, both in Qatar and in Saudi Arabia, they embrace the Muslim Brotherhood philosophy, which has served as basically the intellectual foundation for these terrorists, wherever they are, whatever you want to call them, al-Qaeda or Hezbollah or jihadists or Taliban or whatever we want to call them, ISIL. We need to make sure--it is a time of choosing right now that the juggling has got to stop, and I would hope that the royal family in Qatar and the people of Qatar decide to be our friends because they have that choice, but if they continue down this path, they will be deciding not to be our friends and decide instead with the Muslim Brotherhood and the terrorists. So I hope that this hearing today sends that message. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Rohrabacher. And Mr. Schneider is recognized for the same amount of time. Mr. Schneider. Thank you, Madam Chairwoman. I will apologize in advance, I have a concurrent markup in judiciary. If I jump up and leave, it is because I have to go vote. Please don't take it personally. But thank you for your time here for sharing your perspectives, but also for the work you do on this and other important issues. There is so much here and so much to understand. I think my colleagues have touched on some of the intuitive and counterintuitive aspects of our relationship with Qatar and the difficulties in fully defining the parameters. I will ask a leading question. Would it be better for us and the region if Hamas, the Taliban, al-Qaeda weren't raising finances in Doha? Mr. Levitt. Yes, it would be better. Mr. Schneider. Dr. Schanzer? Mr. Schanzer. Yes, it would, and it would also be better if they didn't have a presence there that was legitimized. Mr. Schneider. Mr. Goldenberg? Mr. Goldenberg. Yes. Mr. Schneider. And the reason I ask the question is you can make lemonade out of lemons. You can find, in a difficult or a bad situation, something to pull out of it, but I think what I am hearing is a broad consensus that we are looking to the Qataris to end the financing of terror in their country and to be a full partner in fighting terrorism in the region. Is that a fair summary? Mr. Levitt. It is, but I think it is just as important to that we finish off today by noting that we need the other GCC countries, this kind of coalition of four in particular to be flexible and allow Qatar some face-saving ways to do this. And so far, they seem to be pretty kind of hardline that nothing is good enough. And so we absolutely must demand that Qatar make real substantive and verifiable change, but in order for that to happen, we are going to have to have, you know, honest conversations with our other allies in the region and kind of insist that they be flexible enough to find a way that Doha can do this, and that is going to have to involve some face-saving gestures, and that is okay so long as the changes are substantive and verifiable. Mr. Schneider. Thank you. And that is where I was trying to get to. So I appreciate that sentiment because it is a matter of we have a base in Qatar. It is an important base to the work we are trying to do in the region. The work we are doing is longitudinal. It is not going to be solved overnight, and we need to have a long-term strategy. Mr. Goldenberg, you referenced and others did, as well, the issue that we have options to look at other places besides Qatar to place our assets, and to the whole panel, as you look at the region, what would be the benefits to us to having a more diverse platform, diversified platform, than just the base in Qatar? Mr. Goldenberg. I think there is definitely, Congressman, a benefit--there is always a benefit to having more diverse options. We have other options in the region. We have options in Central Asia. We have a base in the UAE. We have a base in Bahrain. So the more options you have, the less leverage any one of these actors has over us. At the same time, I think we would have to do a real evaluation because if we lost the base in Qatar, I mean, they even invested $1 billion in that base during the nineties. That is a ton of money. They do have technology there and sort of runways and space and things we don't necessarily have elsewhere. And so I think it would be--and on top of that, if you end up in a situation where we lose access to the base, then you also start running into questions of not being able to conduct as many operations in Iraq, in Syria, and Afghanistan and elsewhere and also a problem where we could bring in a carrier or something like that to offset some of those problems, but then you lose the ability to do things in the Asia Pacific or in Europe. So it is a very complicated question, but it is worth--it is certainly worth exploring, instead of making it just a sacred cow, because whenever you make something a sacred cow and it becomes invaluable to you, then you have a lot less leverage over everything else. One other point, if I can just add on to what Matt was saying, which I think is just important to also weigh, I really do think we need to focus on getting all of our friends in the region to deescalate this crisis, because you just go back and look at it: You know, the President went in May, and the whole conference in Riyadh was about ISIS, Islamic extremism, and Iran. And what have we been doing for 2 months now with these guys? What is Secretary Tillerson doing when he goes out for a week to the GCC? What are we talking about here today? We are talking about the fight they are having amongst each other. You know, if they are spending 90 percent of their time, which I have had diplomats telling me, ``I am spending 90 percent of my time on this issue,'' you know, they are not spending time thinking about all of the other things we want them to think about and what we want to think about. So I think that is a really important piece of trying to deescalate this and trying to find a solution, even as we push them on the terrorism. Mr. Schneider. Thank you. I think that is an important point. My last line is, as we are doing that, as we are balancing all these different issues, consistency of message on our part, transparency on the part of the Qataris, what is the impact of the divergent message or inconsistent messages coming out of the administration having on our ability to move forward in this region? Dr. Schanzer. Mr. Schanzer. I think it is clear that we have a couple of different messages that are coming out. We are hearing, on the one hand, that this crisis is not an urgent issue for the administration and, at the same time, that it is something that we do want to have handled. I think perhaps some of the actors in the region believe they have a free hand to act when they hear parts of the administration speak and then perhaps feel more constrained. I think consistency is going to be important here. I personally believe that we should be sending a message to the Qataris that we demand change. And that ought to be the first thing that we say and then to follow up with that by saying: And as we demand this change of you, the other four actors involved in this crisis can stand down while we take over. And that I think would be the way to get this to a soft landing and perhaps would be one of the face-saving sort of mechanisms that Matt discussed here today. But I would like to see more American leadership on this, if possible. Mr. Schneider. To use your analogy, though, as well, the Ferrari and the other car is also speeding. Is it fair to say that we need to have expectations of all of our allies in the region that they are addressing the terror issue? Mr. Schanzer. 100 percent. Mr. Schneider. Okay. Dr. Levitt, to you. Mr. Levitt. I just say, in my conversations with officials of the past few weeks, it is very clear that the conflicting messages coming out of the administration are affecting them. I have spoken to people on both sides of this intra GCC conflict, and each clearly feel that they can listen to the part that is saying what they want to hear. I have also been in Europe recently and in conversations with counterterrorism officials there, they have been asking me--and I am no longer a government official--what does Washington really think? And so our allies are confused as to what our position is. I think there are other ways that we can do face-saving gestures. I think Jonathan is absolutely right. If we play more of a role, there is more likelihood that things will move forward. We just agreed on a memorandum of understanding with Qatar. Again, there is not a lot of meat on the bones of that. That is fine. Let this be a mechanism to which we say, through guarantees to us--and let's bring others in, the EU others-- Qatar is going to make the following changes. Qatar has to be willing to agree to make those changes and to do it in verifiable ways, and then we can go to the Emiratis and the Saudis in particular and say: Hey, this is how it is going to be done, and this is what the verification is going to look like. But the Qataris have to be willing to make those changes and to do it in such a way that will be verifiable. Mr. Schneider. Great. I see that I am out of time. I appreciate the extended time. I do agree we do have to be clear in our expectations, clear in our strategy in working with all our allies in the region. Thank you very much. I yield back. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Thank you, Mr. Schneider. Mr. DeSantis of Florida. Mr. DeSantis. I thank the chairman. Dr. Schanzer, how would you describe Qatar's relationship with Iran? Mr. Schanzer. Uneasy. Although also a bit more ambiguous than perhaps what has been previously described. Uneasy in the sense that they are a small country, they are a weak country, and they are looking across the Persian Gulf at a powerful country that is on the precipice of a nuclear weapon, and they need to figure out a way to get along with this neighbor, especially one where they share this natural gas field. So that I think explains in general the dynamic, but we have been hearing that there could be more cooperation than was previously seen. I mean, this is essentially what the Gulf quartet has been alleging against Qatar, that it has been working with the Iranians or perhaps with its proxies. I have heard allegations, not just of Hamas, where we know there has been sort of, you know, a cooperation on all fronts, but also potentially Hezbollah, potentially the Houthis in Yemen. We have heard these things. There is not a lot of evidence yet to prove these things, but it is certainly something worth watching. Mr. DeSantis. There are also reports I think that Qatari money has ended up in Iraq with some of the Iranian-backed militia groups there? Mr. Schanzer. Correct. Mr. DeSantis. What about the Muslim Brotherhood and the relationship that Qatar has with the Brotherhood? I read your testimony, and you had wrote about some of the people that they were--Qatar was really supportive of the Morsi government in Egypt after Mubarak was pushed out, but then when General el- Sisi took over, that Qatar was kind of a haven for some of these people, and I have heard reports that some of these really radical clerics like Sheikh Qaradawi, who is one of the biggest Muslim Brotherhood clerics, is in Qatar. So is that true, a lot of those folks who were involved with the Brotherhood government now have refuge in Qatar? Mr. Schanzer. A hundred percent, and in the previous Gulf crisis, there was one 3 years ago, one of the demands of Qatar was that they exile some of these Muslim Brotherhood figures, that they expel them from the country. But when you look at what the Qataris invested in Egypt during that 1 year plus of Morsi rule, it was reportedly $18 billion. It was a real significant investment. You look their support for various actors in Syria; they were definitely throwing their weight behind the Brotherhood there. In the early years of the uprising, the Ennahda Party in Tunisia. Qataris are big supporters there. The Muslim Brotherhood in Libya. It is I think at this point undeniable that the Qataris are the number one supporter financially and politically of the Muslim Brotherhood in the Muslim world. I think Turkey is probably number two, not as much financially but more politically, although perhaps a bit of both. But this is really the cornerstone of the debate as I see it between Qatar and its neighbors, that the neighbors are furious because they do not want to see the Muslim Brotherhood come to power, and they believe that the Qataris have continued to finance and support the Brotherhood in many theaters. Mr. DeSantis. So what is their reason for doing that? I mean, there it is a very wealthy country, the--I mean, just the royal family, huge wealth. Is it just idealogically that is what they want to do because it seems like it has caused them a lot of problems in the region. Mr. Schanzer. I agree it has caused them problems, and I would say that, at this point, when you look at what has happened throughout this crisis, it looks like a gamble that has not paid off, and I think many of the other gambles throughout the Arab Spring, it looks like a lot of money has effectively gone to waste, but they see this as their leverage, a counterleverage to their Gulf neighbors with whom they have a pretty significant rivalry, and it is their way of I think punching above their weight, as Matt had mentioned, and so they continue to pursue this. I think there is certainly an ideological approach here, though, as well. Mr. DeSantis. I am sorry. I actually have run out of time, but do you guys have any insights into the Brotherhood relationship, or did he cover everything? Mr. Goldenberg. I mean, I think, as Jonathan described, there is this relationship. It is a long historical relationship. I think--you know, I am more skeptical about how much of it is ideological and how much of it is more just geopolitical playing, you know, the Qatari overall third way. You know, if it was really deeply ideological, why would they also build a strong relationship with us at the same time? To me, it is more of like they don't want to play the same role, they don't want to just follow the Saudis, they want to be an independent actor in the Gulf. So they are going to just pursue an open-door policy that welcomes all kinds of different players, some of which we can work with, including ourselves, some of which are a huge problem. And so that is the motivation. It doesn't necessarily explain the behavior which-- or excuse the behavior, which I think, again, sometimes they can be useful to us on some of these things, but a lot of times, we need to press them harder to stop. Mr. DeSantis. I am out of time, and I will yield back. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Thank you so much, Mr. DeSantis. Sheila? And now we are so pleased that two members who are not on our subcommittee, but I know that they are very interested in this issue, and I am very pleased to yield to them, and we will start with Ms. Jackson Lee of Texas. Ms. Jackson Lee. Let me thank the chairwoman for her leadership and the ranking member for their leadership of this committee and the important testimony that has been given by the witnesses. I am in the same predicament. Though I have been able to listen to the testimony for a while, I am in the markup and may be called to a vote as I speak. But I will rush very quickly to thank the witnesses. But I really want to speak to Mr. Goldenberg, if I might. I notice that the title of the hearing is ``Assessing the U.S.- Qatar Relationship,'' which I think is extremely important. So, if you might bear with me, I am going to ask questions more or less in a lawyerly factor. Would you indicate or confirm that--and I am just going to go back as far as the Clinton administration, the Bush administration and Obama--in those administrations, would you venture to say that Qatar engaged positively with the United States in Bill Clinton? I am just going to get you, yes or no. Mr. Goldenberg. Yes. Ms. Jackson Lee. Mr. George W. Bush? Mr. Goldenberg. Yes. Ms. Jackson Lee. And President Obama? Mr. Goldenberg. Yes. Ms. Jackson Lee. So, if you just wanted a blanket assessment, that was a positive relationship between the United States and Qatar on some of the issues they were discussing? Mr. Goldenberg. I would say yes. I would say that they are--you know, look I think, Congresswoman, I think that we have a good relationship with them on a number of issues, the most important I think being the air base, but beyond that, you know, when we ask them to do things, they often do them. Ms. Jackson Lee. And let me--forgive me, I am called to a vote. During the Bush administration, do you have a recollection or by news or your research that then Secretary of State asked them to engage with Hamas? Mr. Goldenberg. I don't know, but one of my colleagues might know better than me. Ms. Jackson Lee. Okay. So you mentioned or in the discussion, we have mentioned that the region is an important region. I, from the lawyer's perspective, say that none of them in the court of equity are there with totally clean hands, and I would offer to say that stability is important. Security is important. And in your testimony, I would like you to repeat what you said about engaging so that we can encourage the stability--I understand the list has now been in essence pared down to about six of the demands, but how would it be best for us to effectuate that engagement where all of the parties recognize that there are elements of their policy dealing with terrorists that should be eliminated? Mr. Goldenberg. Sure. I mean, I think that the most important thing--and Matt's brought this up a couple times during the hearing, this question of the MOU being a good starting point. Setting one bar for everyone to meet on the question of terror financing would be, I think, very valuable because there is--the Kuwaitis are a problem. The Qataris are a problem. Maybe the Saudis are getting better, but there is a long history there and a long way to go. The UAE has also had its issues. And so holding them all and saying the United States will hold them all to one standard and applying that standard across all of them I think becomes beneficiary to us in terms of dealing with the overall challenge and also helps to alleviate this crisis amongst them. And then I think also just in terms of dealing with stability and dealing with the region, it is really hammering home the point that we are not going to want to like want to spend all of our time dealing with this internecine conflict that they have amongst themselves. It is time to get back to the bigger issues that threaten their stability and threaten our stability, you know, the things that really draw us into the region, and whether that is ISIS, you know, extremism, you know, some of the things that Iran does in the region that are problematic, but that is where I would really like to see the relationship---- Ms. Jackson Lee. So any interjection by Congress for placing punitive measures on one of the other, in this instance, maybe Qatar, would you view that as a positive act? Mr. Goldenberg. I wouldn't recommend doing that. I would recommend having a standard that Congress applies to everyone across the board. And Qatar might--you know, as Jonathan said, you know, that analogy, Qatar might have the fastest--you know, might be the 90 miles per hour Ferrari, and so they are going to have longer to go. Ms. Jackson Lee. And let me follow-up with, I think, almost concluding question. Emboldening one over the other, I happened to have been in the region during the visit of the administration, and meeting with, at that time, the President of Egypt and discussing these issues. I have a very strong commitment to the region for its security relationship to Israel, which we want to ensure their safety. And would you make the argument that, as you just said, focusing our attention on the larger picture, and trying to ensure the stability of the region by way of setting a certain standard, would that be helpful in terms of making sure the region remains stable for other big fights, and, also, the security of Israel? Mr. Goldenberg. Yeah, I think it would, and I think also, Congresswoman, you mention the issue of emboldening. I do think that--you know, we made a mistake by essentially signaling a green light and a blank check to the Saudis with the President's visit to the region, and basically led them to believe that there was nothing they could do wrong, so they did this. Where the stronger message I think would have been, you know, we will take a tougher stance on the issues you care about, whether it is Iran--or I would not advocate for walking away from the nuclear deal. I think we should stick to the nuclear deal. But, you know, you want to take a harder stance toward Iran's behavior in the region, you want us to do more on counterterrorism, we will do that, but we also expect you to clean up some of your act. And we have expectations of you. This isn't a blank check. This is a quid pro quo or an agreement between a relationship between two partners. And so I think that was part of the problem out of that trip. Ms. Jackson Lee. Let me thank the chairlady---- Thank you all for your testimony. Forgive me for my focused questioning. But let me thank of the chairlady for her kindness. And I like the blank-check analysis that we should not give, and that we should work together for harmony--I like that word as well--in the region. I thank you so very much, and I yield back to the gentlelady. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Thank you. We are thrilled that you were able to join us. And Mrs. Maloney, if you could hold your fire for a just few minutes, because Mr. Connolly, who is on our subcommittee, is back with us, so we are going to yield time to him right now. Mr. Connolly of Virginia. Mr. Connolly. I thank the chair. Mr.--Dr. Schanzer, when you were--in your opening statement, you made some allusion to--a reference to maybe paid lobbyists for governments in the region had descended on our offices or paid a visit. I am not sure I understood the point of that, or what you were getting at, but I wanted to give you an opportunity to explain. Because, I mean, there are a lots of lobbyists, for lots of countries, including Israel, that descend on our offices, and we don't necessarily import to that anything negative by way of inference. Were you suggesting---- Mr. Schanzer. No, Congressman Connolly. There is nothing illegal or unseemly about it. I think the point that I am trying to make is that there is a lot of it right now. Mr. Connolly. That what? Mr. Schanzer. There is a lot of it right now. There is a lot of noise. We are seeing a lot of different actors. Mr. Connolly. I am sorry, because I only have--do you mean about Oman--excuse me, Qatar? Mr. Schanzer. About this Qatar conflict. But I think in general, when we look at the permissive nature of what we have allowed to take place across this region, in my view, it has been the direct result of yielding to these actors. In other words, over time, this has become sort of the boiling frog, although I heard the other say that actually is not scientific, that frogs actually can be boiled. They won't jump out. But regardless, what I would say is that over time, we have come to just accept the fact that there are terror financiers running around in Qatar, that there are terror financiers running around in Kuwait, and we are being asked to look the other way. And over time, we have grown used to this because they have engaged with us on deals to buy weapons, on investments here in the United States, and because they have a face here in Washington. And what I would like to do is to try to look beyond the messaging and get back to the facts here, which is that we have problematic relations. Mr. Connolly. Right. But could it not also be because we also have bases? Could we have troops stationed there? And we have the largest base in the region in Qatar? Mr. Schanzer. We do. And the question---- Mr. Connolly. I mean, maybe we have conflicting interests here. I am not testifying to that behavior, but it is not a simple matter of paid lobbyists who are influencing us here, there is a lot of money flowing around. It is because, actually, we are looking at U.S. interest in the region, and we see a conflict. Mr. Schanzer. But I would actually argue in response to that that one of the reasons why we have been able to keep the base, or how the Qataris have been able to keep that base, is that we continue to hear, Well, gosh, they are doing all these wonderful things, and they are helping us out. So, you know, we will deal with this terror finance problem quietly over here. Let's not deal with it. Now, look 10 years later, and we still have this problem. We now have a full-blown crisis. My argument is, is that we have not dealt honestly with the problem of terrorism finance in Qatar for a long time, and I would argue that we probably haven't dealt honestly with the terror finance problems of some of those other countries as well. Mr. Connolly. Yeah, I--I mean, if we are going to go that route, I would add to your list. I mean, I would add the Saudis, financing Wahhabism and madrassahs all over the world that have fomented enormous amounts of terrorism and extremism, one can argue. Okay. Mr. Goldenberg, you talked about the conflicting messages from the President and Secretary of State with respect to this conflict. And I have to agree with you. I am just wondering, adding to that, like, what is the policy? And should we be doing it by tweet? Different. But how about the State Department, only two of 22 Assistant Secretaries even nominated, the Ambassador in Doha resigning and arguing because increasingly, it is difficult to wake up overseas and try to explain what the hell is going on in Washington, DC, and what it means as the Ambassador. And of course, a proposed 32 percent cut to State and aid, just spitballing here, could that have something to do with our inability to effect some kind of understanding and agreement and reconciliation among the GCC? Mr. Goldenberg. Well, I will say this: Yes, I think it is a huge problem that you have all these vacancies. And it is a good example of the fact that Secretary Tillerson had to go over there on his own for 4 days. I am not sure I would have recommended that. I don't think this issue necessarily merits that, unless you actually think you are going to have some agreement, or unless you are going to have some kind of a breakthrough. And it is very obvious to those of us watching it, that you weren't going to have an agreement. So I do think that in a situation like that, who else do you send, though? You pretty much have nobody, especially the Assistant Secretary. As you know, somebody who worked for the State Department for a number of years. You know, in every department and in every agency, and I have worked in a couple, there is that key level in the middle, that the individual who is senior enough to be able to reach up to the Secretary of State and, like, get in front of them immediately and inform them, and still close enough for the worker bees and the people working, and the experts in the agency who can reach down and pull in. At the State Department, those are the Assistant Secretaries. They are the key, in my view, node. And the fact that they don't exist means there is no connectivity between the entire Department and the expertise and the Secretary. So, yes, I think it harms us on this issue, and pretty much all issues. Mr. Connolly. And, Madam Chairman, Lois Frankel had a question. If I could ask it on her behalf and that way---- Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Yes, we would be honored to have you ask it on her behalf. Mr. Connolly [continuing]. We shave 5 minutes, you know? Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Please go ahead. Mr. Connolly. All right. So Lois' question, Ms. Frankel's question, and I will put it to you first, Mr. Goldenberg: Would the removal of our military base give license to or make worse the behavior in question? Mr. Goldenberg. It is an interesting question. I hadn't thought about it precisely that way. It may. I think the--I think the bigger challenge logistically would be that if we were to remove the military base, we--it would, first of all, be incredibly costly. The Qataris spent $1 million on that base. Yet, look at what the alternatives are. It would then strain our ability to conduct operations, the same tempo in Iraq, Afghanistan---- Mr. Connolly. I don't think that is the question. I think the question is---- Mr. Goldenberg. By leverage. Mr. Connolly [continuing]. Implied here, by having the military base in Qatar, does it moderate behavior? Would it be worse without it, assuming there is any bad behavior at all? Mr. Goldenberg. Maybe. I mean, I--so yes, but I would argue--it sort of works both ways. I agree with the notion that if we had no relationship--this would basically dramatically shrink our relationship with Qatar, and then reduce our leverage over them. It would also reduce their leverage over us, so there is a bit of two sides to it. So it is a hard sort of hypothetical to make. But I think the better option at this point is now that the military base is there, to not walk away from it for all those reasons. But to also clarify that we have other options, so this isn't a gun they could just hold to our head. I think that is where we need to be on this question. Mr. Connolly. Dr. Levitt. Then my time is up. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Levitt. So right now, we often look at the base as too big to fail, and we need it so badly that we don't really use it as much leverage, and we need to begin to use it at some leverage. If we suddenly woke up tomorrow and there was no base, we would lose a lot of leverage, yes, but we would still have plenty of areas where we a relationship with Qatar. In the best of circumstances, I certainly hope that we don't move the base. But I think Ilan is right, that we should start looking at what other options there might be to move some or all of it, not because we want to, but just to signal that it is not us who are over a barrel by virtue of having the base there, they are not necessarily over a barrel either, but it is a relationship. And I don't think we really use it for very much leverage right now. Mr. Schanzer. I would agree that we need the leverage. And what I recommend in my written testimony is that we need to do an assessment. It is not to say that we need to leave, although I think the arrangement is not sustainable. It is not, I think, the right message that we should be sending to the rest of the region. But this does not have to be binary. We can move some assets out of that base because we decide we need to redistribute, and we can't ever rely too much on the Qataris, or we might say, look, we can't move anything. But at the very least--and I think, by the way, this hearing is doing a lot of good. The Qataris know right now that we are talking about whether or not we should move the base, whether we should assess moving the base. This is incredibly important. It takes leverage away from them and puts it back in our court. Mr. Connolly. Thank you, Madam Chairman, on behalf of myself and Congresswoman Frankel. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Thank you very much. We love to hear Lois' voice, even in absentia. And now we are so pleased to turn to Mrs. Maloney. Thank you for your patience in sitting through the subcommittee to be able ask your question. Thank you, Carolyn, you are always welcome to be a part of our sub. Mrs. Maloney. Thank you, Madam Chair. And thank you for allowing me privileges to attend your committee meeting and giving me the opportunity to ask a question. And thank you for having a hearing on a very important issue, which is a top concern to Secretary Tillerson. That is why he personally went to the region, and he has expressed his deep concern about peace and security in the region, not only for Americans and our base, but also for all of our allies. And he publicly expressed his concern that our allies, all of the--these are all allies of America, and that he is concerned that it--if it continues, it will break up the Gulf Cooperation Council that has been an important area of cooperation with United States and our ability to collectively combat ISIS. He also has called for the embargo, or the easing of the embargo, as it is harmful to the stability of the region, stability of the Gulf Cooperation Council, and it is difficult for our base. The embargo affects also the American base. So his vision, I believe, is a good one, would you say, that we should figure out how to work together? We are all allies, and the enemy is not each other, but the enemy is ISIS and other terrorist activities in the region. Would you agree with Secretary Tillerson, Mr. Goldenberg? Mr. Goldenberg. Yes, I would. I think that this whole crisis has been a distraction from other things we should be dealing with. You know, I am not sure I would have put as much into it has he has, necessarily, because I think that, you know, part of this is these parties have to also solve it themselves, and be responsible about that, but we can play I think a very positive role and also try to get them to de- escalate and guaranteeing any agreement and trying to push all of them in terror financing questions. So, you know, I--I agree. For our interests, for the U.S. interests, the fact that the last 2 months in the Gulf have been spent on this instead of on all the things we prefer to be spending their time on is not good. That is the bottom line. So it would be better if we can find a way to get over this. Sadly, I think right now, there are no indicators in the near term that is going to happen, so that we start managing the situation and also getting awful these different actors to at least tone down their public rhetoric and maximalist demands so that a few months from now, after things cool down, maybe privately they can cut some deals. Mrs. Maloney. Well, he has begun focusing on terrorism financing, which, I believe, is a way forward, and I understand that he has created certain criteria already for the Gulf nations to cooperate with them. And I hope that they all will. That would be a huge step forward on allowing access to their financial tracking of where money is going, if you crack down on the terrorism financing, then you are cracking down on terrorism. Are you aware of any agreements that the State Department has made with these countries to combat terrorism financing? I was told that Qatar has entered into an agreement to share their database, to share their information to combat terrorism financing. Are you aware of that? Mr. Goldenberg. I am, but I think, Matt, you want to---- Mr. Levitt. Sure. Mr. Goldenberg. Matt is a real expert on this. Mr. Levitt. So first of all, thank you for your questions. I want to start by pointing out that there is complete consensus across this table in the need to de-escalate this crisis. And as Ilan said, we need to be focusing on the other more important issues. Several of us have also said that some of the charges already against Qatar are baseless, but some of them are very much grounded in truth, and they affect all those other issues. Mrs. Maloney. But my question is, are you aware of agreements, concrete agreements, between Qatar and the United States, or Saudi Arabia and the United States, or Bahrain, or the UAE---- Mr. Levitt. Getting to that. Mrs. Maloney [continuing]. Or any of the countries specifically to work together to combat terrorism financing? Mr. Levitt. Yes. So that is what I was getting at. There are many agreements. There have been several of them going on for years, bilateral and otherwise. There are two new ones. One came out of the Riyadh summit, which was the agreement to set up a terror finance tracking center, the TFTC. There is no meat on those bones yet. If you look at the Treasury statements, they have lots of great ideas, I have spoken to some people who wrote those statements; they are aspirational. But there is great foundation there upon which we can build. And in my previous statements, I have already pointed to that as something we can use as a face saving gesture to move forward and out of this crisis. Mrs. Maloney. I think that is a great idea, Dr. Levitt. We should appeal to all of these countries to join us and combat the specifics on how we would fight terrorism financing. And I personally want to thank Secretary Tillerson for entering in with his entire effort to personally try to solve this. We are talking about allies. We need to get together. And I am not aware of any other country that wants to host the U.S. military. I just recall being invited to leave one country very quickly. We were told to leave Saudi Arabia, and I am not aware that any other country in the region wants to host a U.S. military. Are you aware of any other country that wants us to come in and be there, Dr. Levitt? Mr. Levitt. Well, we do have bases in the UAE and Bahrain, so it is not like this is the only base we have. And I don't think the base is the ultimate issue. If I could just add, there is one other agreement. As you noted, Secretary Tillerson signed an MOU, Memorandum of Understanding, with Qatar. This too, there is absolutely no meat on these bones, but they are very good bones, and there is more that can be built on them. I don't want people to walk away thinking, now there is an MOU, so now we can cooperate. Mrs. Maloney. I think that is a very important issue, Dr. Levitt. And what you could do to help us is give us exactly what kind of meat should be added to that bone, and then we should present a detailed agreement on combating terrorism financing to all of the countries in the region and see who will cooperate with us in a specific way. I must tell you, it is deeply important to me. I represent the great city of New York, and lost 500 friends. We lost 3,000 on that day, but literally thousands and thousands more that were exposed to the deadly fumes from the terrorist attack. So we know that there are efforts to attack New York and other cities in our--including this city. We have intelligence on that and other cities, and anything we can do with our allies to combat terrorism can save future lives in America and other places. And I for one support Secretary Tillerson's effort to end the crisis. Let's join hands. Let's combat terrorism. Let's combat terrorism financing. Because if they can't finance their activities, they can't attack us. I represent a district that just 6 months ago, two bombs went off. You ask where did they get the money for the bombs? How did they learn how to put them together? Who helped them? So terrorism financing is very important, I think, to the world, and especially to the United States and especially to New York City, which remains the number one terrorist target in the country. So I want to thank all of you for your work in combating terrorism financing, and I would welcome any ideas of how we could put more strength behind efforts to combat it. And I think that if we combat it, we would also strike against the financing of terrorism activities in other countries, which allegedly, I was listening to my colleagues and their questioning, were very concerned about, and where they are teaching, you know, terrorism and we need to stop it. My time is way, way over. I want to thank you for being here, and thank you for your work, and thank you for everything you have done to make the world safer. And thank you. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Thank you, Mrs. Maloney. Mrs. Maloney. Madam Chair, I don't know if I will have the chance to publicly say in your committee meeting how very, very sad you have decided to retire and leave us. You have been an incredible leader. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. I am going to miss all of our colleagues. Mrs. Maloney. Wonderful, your leadership on this committee and as chairman of this committee has been extraordinary. First woman to head this as the chair. We are very proud of you, Ileana. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Thank you, Mrs. Maloney. Thank you so much. And feel free to come back to our subcommittee. You are a valuable member. We will make you an ex officio member. Thank you. I have just one last wrap-up question. I know you gentlemen have been testifying for hours now. But, Dr. Schanzer, this tension has been going on for such a long time. Why do you think that its neighbors decided to take action only now? Is there something else that you believe precipitated this? Mr. Schanzer. Madam Chair, thank you for the question. It is--it is really one of the questions that I think we all should have been asking all along. I think when you talk to most analysts in this town, they tell you, Well, they hate each other, it was the Brotherhood, it was the Arab Spring. Well, what made this thing erupt in the spring? There were some reports that it was, perhaps, because the Qataris paid ransom and money went to Shiite militias as well as to bad actors in Syria. But there has also been reports surfaced recently and there is a little bit of confusion over this. But I think it is worth unpacking. There is a report from the UAE Ambassador to Russia, he went on BBC and claimed the Qataris provided intelligence about Emirati and Saudi troop movements in Yemen, and that this led directly to the death of dozens of Gulf soldiers in the Yemeni operation. I have also heard from three different sources since then that it may not have been al-Qaeda that they shared this information with but rather the Houthis and the Saleh forces in Yemen. This would be devastating for Qatar if this were to be true, because, of course, it would mean they were sharing information with Iranian proxies, which is an absolute red line for the Gulf States. So this allegedly happened in the spring. I have not been able to confirm it with a U.S. official. All I can tell you is this is what I have been hearing from people who generally know in this town. Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Well, thank you very much. And I thank the audience and the witnesses for their patience, excellent testimony. You will forgive me that I was gone a little bit from the podium. We had our bill up on the floor calling upon Iran to release the hostages, the American hostages, who are citizens and residents, and we were overwhelmingly approved. So that is why I was absent. And with that, our subcommittee is adjourned. Thank you to all. [Whereupon, at 4:38p.m., the subcommittee was adjourned.] A P P E N D I X ---------- [GRAPHICS NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] [all]