American victims sue Qatar for financing terrorist operations
 
The corridors of America’s courts are currently witnessing
lawsuits filed against Qatar by the victims of Doha's terrorism, including a
lawsuit accusing official Qatari circles of financing terrorists who carried
out brutal killings of Americans, according to multiple American newspapers,
most notably the Washington Post.
Accusations
Attorney Stephen Perles, who represents victims of terrorism
in New York, filed the lawsuit, which is focused on targeting Qatar Charity for
being a means of financing international terrorism.
The lawsuit accuses Qatar of using American financial
channels to finance terrorists, stressing that official bodies and financial
institutions provided huge sums of money to them.
Qatar has provided covert funding for many terrorist attacks
that have claimed American lives, according to a copy of the lawsuit obtained
by the website Free Beacon website.
Funding Hamas and Islamic Jihad
The lawsuit stated that as part of this financing scheme,
Qatari charities used the US banking system to illegally transfer funds to terrorist
groups to plan and carry out the attacks.
Free Beacon suggested that the disclosure of Qatar's
involvement in these terrorist plots may feed the ongoing congressional
investigations into Qatar's support for terrorist groups and other anti-US
militias.
The current case includes the family of Taylor Force, an
American veteran who was killed by Hamas in 2016.
Qatar Charity worked with Al-Rayan Bank and Qatar National
Bank (QNB), which are largely controlled by members of the ruling family in
Doha, to send millions of dollars to Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Palestine,
which have been involved in the assassination of American soldiers, according
to the lawsuit.
The lawsuit stated that both banks are essential to
providing access to the US financial system to obtain the money needed to
support terrorist activities. Al-Rayan Bank is also currently under
investigation in the United Kingdom for assisting Qatar Charity in terrorist
acts.
Source of concern
Qatar's involvement with these groups has been a source of
tension with Doha’s regional neighbors, including Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt
and Bahrain, which cut ties with the Qatari regime in 2017 because of its
support for terrorism.
Free Beacon stated that Qatar deliberately caused a kind of
strife between the United States and Arab countries. Among the cases brought
against Doha was the payment of money to agents to spy on a number of Arab
countries to cause sedition.
Another lawsuit
Another US lawsuit revealed that Qatar had recruited a team
consisting of former CIA and military intelligence officials to launch a cyber
operation against prominent US Republican Party member Elliot Broidy.
Broidy, a businessman and former Republican Party
fundraiser, has been exposing Doha's support for terrorism over the past two
years.
According to Free Beacon, Broidy confirmed that Qatar used
former US intelligence agents to carry out a cyber espionage operation in 2018
targeting his personal and work email servers.
Broidy explained that information from his email was later
leaked to the media in order to discredit him and to achieve Doha’s interests
in the United States.
The lawsuit revealed that hackers affiliated with the
advisory group Global Risk Advisors in the United States had received money
from Qatar to carry out the illegal plot and similar attacks targeting
prominent critics of Qatar.
          
     
                               
 
 


