Arab and Islamic Leaders Meet in Emergency Summit Over Qatar Strike
- On Wednesday, during the second day of the MEAD conference in Washington, Israel conducted its first-ever airstrike in Qatar, killing at least five lower-ranking Hamas members and one Qatari security officer in Doha.
- The strike followed Hamas's deadly attack near Jerusalem and aimed at Hamas leaders Qatar has hosted for years as a regional mediator with U.S. knowledge and support.
- Qatar condemned the strike as state terrorism and called for Netanyahu to be brought to justice, while Gulf nations expressed anger and warned that such aggression threatens regional security frameworks.
- Netanyahu threatened further strikes if Qatar continued harboring Hamas, but President Trump expressed unhappiness, stating it "does not advance Israel or America's goals," and Israeli opposition questioned its strategic value.
- The attack risks undermining Arab-Israeli normalization and U.S.-led regional integration as Qatar reevaluates ceasefire talks and Gulf allies warn of jeopardized security and peace efforts.
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175 Articles
Draft resolution from Doha summit: Israeli attack in Qatar threatens normalization efforts
Israel's attack in Qatar last week and its other actions threaten efforts to normalise ties with Arab nations, an updated draft resolution from the Arab-Islamic summit said
The world must "end its double standards" and punish Israel, says Qatar's prime minister ahead of a regional summit on the shocking Israeli attack on Hamas members in the mediator country's capital, Doha.
Qatar hosts emergency summit as Gaza assault escalates
Arab and Muslim leaders gather in Doha to coordinate a response after Israel struck Hamas members in Qatar. As Israel intensifies attacks on Gaza City, Qatar condemns the strike as a violation of sovereignty and pledges to continue mediation.
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