Monday briefing: Israel’s bombing of Qatar threatens the fabric of Gulf security | Qatar

Good morning. Last Monday, Israel’s foreign minister, Gideon Saar, announced that his country had accepted the US ceasefire proposal to end the devastating war in Gaza. The very next day, Israel attempted to kill Hamas’s negotiating team while they were in Qatar’s capital to discuss that same proposal.

Israel, initially bullish about the success of the operation, has since grown more doubtful that it killed any Hamas leaders in Doha. Hamas said that while six people were killed in the bombing – including the son of Khalil al-Hayya, the deputy head of its political bureau – the top leadership including the negotiating team survived.

Qatar condemned the strike in its capital as an act of “state terror”. The international community, including the US, denounced the bombing. Israeli media reported that Washington had given a green light and warned Qatar in advance – a claim the Gulf state fiercely denied.

Today, the shocked Gulf nation is hosting an unprecedented emergency Arab-Islamic summit in Doha in response to becoming the sixth Middle Eastern country struck by Israel in the past few months. For decades, Qatar, like the rest of the Gulf, believed that a closer relationship with the US would guarantee its security. No longer.

To understand the unprecedented path Israel is charting, and how Qatar is reassessing once established geopolitical boundaries, I spoke to Guardian columnist Nesrine Malik. That’s after the headlines.

Five big stories

  1. UK news | Britain will “never surrender” to far-right protesters who use the English flag as cover for violence and to instil fear, Keir Starmer has said, condemning attacks against police officers and racist harassment after more than 110,000 people attended an extremist London rally.

  2. Crime | Christian Brueckner, prime suspect in the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, has refused to be interviewed by the Metropolitan police before his pending release from prison in Germany, Scotland Yard has said.

  3. US | The Utah governor, Spencer Cox, has said 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, the man accused of killing Turning Point USA executive director Charlie Kirk, “does come from a conservative family – but his ideology was very different than his family”. Robinson was not cooperating with authorities, said Cox.

  4. Europe | Poland’s foreign minister has said the Russian drone incursion into Polish airspace was an attempt by the Kremlin to test Nato’s reactions by incremental escalations without prompting a full-scale response, as Romania became the second Nato country to report an incursion in a matter of days.

  5. Television | It was a full sweep for Adolescence at the Emmys, winning every award in which the show was nominated tonight. Fifteen-year-old Owen Cooper made history as the youngest ever actor to win the Emmy for best supporting actor in a limited series. Emmy awards 2025 – full list of winners

In depth: Qatar has to ‘play on both ropes’

Islamic political party Jamat-e-Islami rally against Israeli airstrikes on Qatar. Photograph: A Hussain/EPA

Qatar is a small wealthy country surrounded by bombastic neighbours in a volatile region. Its population is about 3 million, only 13% of whom are Qatari citizens. The rest of the population is made up largely of migrant workers.

Qatar made a calculation about a decade ago that in order to remain safe, it must be indispensable to geopolitical superpowers that shape the region. It did so by becoming the global capital of diplomacy. Nesrine Malik sketches out just how Qatar became so crucial in mediation efforts in her brilliant long read on the Gulf state.

As she notes, Qatar was central to the negotiations with the Taliban as the US withdrew its troops from Afghanistan; the return of some Ukrainian children from Russia; the return of US hostages from Iran; the release of Israeli hostages held by Hamas and Palestinian prisoners in Israel; as well as a brief ceasefire in Gaza. The rich Gulf country is running 10 active mediations, aiming to cement its status as the Switzerland of the Middle East.

“It has to keep a lot of people sweet and, as we say in Arabic, play on both ropes, because it can’t really afford to alienate anyone dramatically,” Nesrine told me. “It has to be the US partner in the region. It has to be the party that can speak to everyone: to Hamas, the Taliban, to all sorts of disparate groups that the US and other countries do not have direct links with. That becomes its sort of protective raison d’être.”

That strategy of protection has suffered a major blow after Israel’s deadly strike on Qatari soil, coming on the heels of Iran’s barrage of rockets earlier this year during its war with Israel. So what comes next?


A crack in the US shield

You may be surprised to learn that Qatar is the second largest purchaser of US foreign military sales (FMS). I certainly was.

This is part of Qatar’s long established partnership with the US. “It is the US’s largest security partner in the region. There’s a large airbase which has more than 10,000 US troops. That base is entirely funded by Qatar and actually hosts the central command for the US military in the region,” Nesrine said.

For Qatar, that airbase has acted like a shield. “It was supposed to mean that no one could really attack Qatar meaningfully, because that would put US military assets and personnel in the line of fire. What that calculation did not assume was that Israel would attack [Qatar] to try to eliminate Hamas individuals, because the assumption was that Israel and the US were of the same mind, right?”

There are conflicting reports on what the US knew about the attack. While Israeli media suggests the US gave the green light, US outlets have reported that Donald Trump was unhappy and in the dark about it.

“From the Qatari perspective, if you cannot control Israel, or if the US and Israel are not reliable partners, then investing in the US relationship, which Qatar has done massively, is no longer a guarantor of security,” Nesrine said.

She points to a recent report that the Qatari prime minister, Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim al-Thani, told US special convoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff that if the US can’t protect Qatar, then it will need to look to other partners. This marks a profound shift in how the Gulf state thinks about sovereignty.


Israel’s crushing dominance

It is notable how quickly Israel took responsibility for the attack. The Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, defended the strike amid mounting international criticism, and warned Qatar that either it must “expel” Hamas members or “bring them to justice, because if you don’t, we will”.

Qatar pushed back at Israel’s rhetoric – calling it a “shameful attempt … to justify the cowardly attack that targeted Qatari territory, as well as the explicit threats of future violations of state sovereignty”. But in reality, it is in an extremely difficult position.

Nesrine tells me that for Qatar to retaliate militarily, using the equipment it has bought for billions, would be a terrifying escalation.

Nesrine describes Israel as having “been given carte blanche to do what it wants”, pointing to the “Gaza riviera” plan to ethnically cleanse Palestinians and forcibly resettle them in Jordan and Egypt.

“They’re constantly squeezing Arab countries to accept ever more subordination, subjugation and humiliation. And now the violation of the sovereignty of the US’s most reliable, closest partner in the region pushes all these Arab states from the GCC [Gulf Cooperation Council] to the rest of the region into undeniable vassalage,” Nesrine said.

She added that the latter is desirable for Israel. “It seems the wider campaign is to not only dominate Palestinians but the entire region. The point is that the prior settlement where there was implicit trust and quid pro quo, which gave Gulf states some sense of control over their fate, is gone.”


Possible end of the Abraham accords

The question facing countries in the region that have been staunch US allies is the same one that Europe has been trying to answer: what happens after the US abandons us?

Nesrine describes Gulf countries as being like siblings. “They’re not close on a day to day basis and actually [they are] even often hostile. But when one of them is attacked, they rally together really quickly because they realise that the security and integrity of one country is the security integrity of all.”

After Qatar was attacked, the sharpest condemnation came from other countries in the GCC. Leaders from the UAE touched down in Qatar to offer their solidarity, followed by Saudi Arabia. It is worth noting that the UAE has diverged sharply on Israel from its neighbours, normalising their relations during Trump’s first term. But as Nesrine explained: “What might happen, and what it looks like is happening, is the death of the Abraham accords.”

Those accords, among other things, normalised relations with Israel on the agreement that it would not annex the occupied Palestinian territories. So on 4 September, in a rare public rebuke, a UAE diplomat told Israeli media that annexation of the West Bank was a red line and would lead to the accord’s unravelling.

That warning did not appear to be heeded – within days Netanyahu announced approval of the controversial E1 settlement, which slices the West Bank in two, destroying any remaining hope of a two-state solution. The Israeli prime minister declared “there will be no Palestinian state” and vowed to annex the West Bank.

skip past newsletter promotion

Israel’s actions last week also show its reach can go much further than the occupied Palestinian territories. “It is this sense that Israel’s hand can reach into Damascus, Tehran, Doha, southern Lebanon … This impacts or undermines these countries’ ability to think of themselves as states that have any sort of volition,” Nesrine said. “And if you do want to act out of your own volition, what Israel is making very clear is that it’s not going to be a matter of words, or finger-wagging, or diplomatic fallout – it’s going to be a big military conflict immediately. So … any contemplation of challenging Israel, or going against it, becomes a question of annihilation.”

But that also comes with a cost to Israel. “If Gulf countries freeze Israel out, that sends the message: your fate is to remain an isolated, belligerent state in the region that can only operate through brute force. In the short term, Israel’s right is fine with that. In the long term, it’s corrosive, draining and costly,” Nesrine said.

The next few days will determine whether Gulf and other Arab countries are willing to finally stand on their own two feet.

What else we’ve been reading

The Registration Numbers Club annual rally at Wytham Transport Museum near Birmingham, July 2025. Photograph: Gareth Iwan Jones/The Guardian
  • I was charmed by Simon Hattenstone’s profile of the former taoiseach Leo Varadkar. How refreshing to hear from a (former) politician who can answer a question. Poppy

  • Why have the super rich sold their homes and started living in motorhomes? Emma Beddington’s column on how the wealthy are responding to climate breakdown and geopolitical instability made me chuckle, and gave me pause for thought. Aamna

  • Whenever I see custom made licence plates in my area (which is more often than I would once have assumed), I think two things: How much did that cost? And: Why? This deep dive on custom plate collectors tries to find out – and while I don’t think I’ll ever understand the why I do now know a lot more about how much. Poppy

  • Short-form video, now popular on all social media platforms, is serving us a diet of violence, prejudice, damage and social unrest. This, John Harris warns, is how the political future is being decided. Aamna

  • I was stunned by the attention to detail and the humanising impact of Oliver Laughland’s investigation into an ICE facility in Louisiana. Housed in a small, regional airport, the holding station has had more than 20,000 detainees pass through it in the last seven months, spawning stories of horrific neglect and abuse. Poppy

Sport

Kelsey Clifford of England scores her second try during the Women’s Rugby World Cup 2025 quarter-final against Scotland. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

Football | Erling Haaland scored twice in City’s comfortable 3-0 win over United in the Manchester derby at the Etihad Stadium.

Rugby | England’s Red Roses broke their own world record of consecutive wins with a 40-8 victory against Scotland to set up a World Cup semi-final against France.

Boxing | Terence Crawford defeats Canelo Álvarez to win undisputed super middleweight championship

The front pages

“PM condemns protesters who use England flag as symbol of violence” says the Guardian. The Metro has “Show’s over for phone grabbers” as police in London promise a West End street theft crackdown. A London lead in the Express too: “Khan ‘must quit’ over grooming failure”. The Express leads with “Scramble inside No 10 to save Starmer” while the Times reports “Bruised PM hopes deals with US will quell revolt”. The Telegraph runs with “Benefits rebels rally behind Burnham”. Top story in the i paper is “Prisoners will help to build warships under new plan to boost UK defences”. In the Financial Times you can read “Fed expected to reduce rates for first time this year as job market weakens”. “RIP, champ” – the Mirror pays tribute to boxer Ricky Hatton.

Today in Focus

Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images

Rupert Murdoch picks a son in the real-life succession battle

Who is Lachlan Murdoch and how will he build on his father’s legacy? Emily Bell reports

Cartoon of the day | Edith Pritchett

Edith Pritchett / The Guardian Illustration: Edith Pritchett/The Guardian

Sign up for Inside Saturday to see more of Edith Pritchett’s cartoons, the best Saturday magazine content and an exclusive look behind the scenes

The Upside

A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad

Excel spreadsheet British champion Ha Dang at home in Scunthorpe, UK. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Guardian

Ever found yourself wondering why you spent all that time learning Microsoft Excel at school? Not so for Ha Dang, who will represent Britain in the spreadsheet world championships in Las Vegas this December. The 33-year-old has won himself a slot at the contest after seeing off more than 40 rivals in the inaugural British competition, a feat that has left him “astounded and privileged”.

Dang will now head to Sin City to represent Britain against hundreds of others for the title of “world’s best spreadsheeter”, with a $5,000 prize and a personalised championship belt up for grabs. He said: “Growing up, I have always been into working with spreadsheets but I did not find many peers with whom I could exchange my formulae and Excel tricks. It was a delight when I discovered that there is actually a worldwide competition.”

Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday

Bored at work?

And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow.

Continue Reading