Dubai Telegraph - Shadow campaign: Global influence op targets Qatar in wartime

EUR -
AED 3.884622
AFN 71.845215
ALL 98.56526
AMD 409.224079
ANG 1.905628
AOA 965.621197
ARS 1056.318894
AUD 1.633339
AWG 1.906389
AZN 1.799806
BAM 1.964065
BBD 2.134884
BDT 126.351728
BGN 1.956737
BHD 0.398642
BIF 3122.028536
BMD 1.057636
BND 1.422847
BOB 7.305745
BRL 6.130005
BSD 1.057355
BTN 89.243286
BWP 14.514149
BYN 3.460262
BYR 20729.662984
BZD 2.131269
CAD 1.485153
CDF 3031.184243
CHF 0.938959
CLF 0.037313
CLP 1029.58763
CNY 7.644573
CNH 7.651958
COP 4740.059545
CRC 540.052286
CUC 1.057636
CUP 28.02735
CVE 110.730991
CZK 25.277288
DJF 188.283246
DKK 7.458786
DOP 63.947904
DZD 141.286364
EGP 52.196432
ERN 15.864538
ETB 131.064782
FJD 2.404319
FKP 0.83481
GBP 0.83347
GEL 2.882089
GGP 0.83481
GHS 16.996527
GIP 0.83481
GMD 75.091551
GNF 9112.486638
GTQ 8.165401
GYD 221.210926
HKD 8.233595
HNL 26.698482
HRK 7.544391
HTG 138.920831
HUF 406.658904
IDR 16814.083479
ILS 3.953755
IMP 0.83481
INR 89.295508
IQD 1385.129062
IRR 44531.757669
ISK 145.900769
JEP 0.83481
JMD 167.385201
JOD 0.749964
JPY 164.408966
KES 136.96951
KGS 91.48592
KHR 4294.64687
KMF 493.382838
KPW 951.871879
KRW 1475.254041
KWD 0.325202
KYD 0.881108
KZT 524.206025
LAK 23227.749724
LBP 94684.562614
LKR 308.909991
LRD 195.081889
LSL 19.353847
LTL 3.122924
LVL 0.639753
LYD 5.164759
MAD 10.560542
MDL 19.153604
MGA 4953.870876
MKD 61.730909
MMK 3435.160039
MNT 3593.846618
MOP 8.476271
MRU 42.0333
MUR 49.931234
MVR 16.351333
MWK 1833.424297
MXN 21.53867
MYR 4.728165
MZN 67.529792
NAD 19.353847
NGN 1766.685256
NIO 38.910252
NOK 11.706712
NPR 142.789579
NZD 1.80052
OMR 0.407214
PAB 1.05735
PEN 4.028955
PGK 4.189214
PHP 62.130289
PKR 293.676773
PLN 4.316474
PYG 8257.751231
QAR 3.854539
RON 4.976813
RSD 116.985418
RUB 105.579986
RWF 1451.716144
SAR 3.972546
SBD 8.866568
SCR 14.542056
SDG 636.163919
SEK 11.59133
SGD 1.417808
SHP 0.83481
SLE 24.00983
SLL 22178.100313
SOS 604.245714
SRD 37.394301
STD 21890.927079
SVC 9.251935
SYP 2657.341694
SZL 19.361571
THB 36.861252
TJS 11.271286
TMT 3.701726
TND 3.339469
TOP 2.47709
TRY 36.409859
TTD 7.179212
TWD 34.343573
TZS 2813.311443
UAH 43.588942
UGX 3880.329656
USD 1.057636
UYU 44.919247
UZS 13541.988977
VES 48.069456
VND 26853.374652
VUV 125.564655
WST 2.952487
XAF 658.732268
XAG 0.03451
XAU 0.000412
XCD 2.858314
XDR 0.796556
XOF 658.732268
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.25052
ZAR 19.237653
ZMK 9519.992964
ZMW 28.997029
ZWL 340.558318
  • RBGPF

    1.6500

    61.84

    +2.67%

  • CMSD

    -0.0478

    24.31

    -0.2%

  • RYCEF

    0.0600

    6.85

    +0.88%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    24.56

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    0.0700

    140.42

    +0.05%

  • SCS

    0.0800

    13.35

    +0.6%

  • NGG

    0.1550

    62.525

    +0.25%

  • RELX

    -1.5400

    44.41

    -3.47%

  • BCE

    -0.2650

    26.575

    -1%

  • VOD

    0.1050

    8.785

    +1.2%

  • AZN

    -1.3700

    63.67

    -2.15%

  • GSK

    -0.9209

    33.08

    -2.78%

  • BTI

    0.5850

    36.075

    +1.62%

  • BP

    0.0900

    29.14

    +0.31%

  • JRI

    -0.0265

    13.05

    -0.2%

  • RIO

    0.6800

    61.11

    +1.11%

Shadow campaign: Global influence op targets Qatar in wartime
Shadow campaign: Global influence op targets Qatar in wartime / Photo: Chris DELMAS - AFP

Shadow campaign: Global influence op targets Qatar in wartime

Shady websites calling for a boycott of Qatar, a New York billboard targeting the Gulf state's rulers, and a Vietnamese outfit floating hundreds of slander-ridden Facebook ads -- all elements of a sprawling influence operation vilifying the country as it mediates between Israel and Hamas.

Text size:

The murky operation, which began late last year and spans multiple countries, is the largest ever to target the wealthy emirate, disinformation researchers say, as the nine-month war between Israel and the Palestinian militant group rages on.

The campaigns, many using Islamophobic and anti-immigrant tropes, involve an anti-Qatar ad that featured at a US gathering of political conservatives attended by Donald Trump and an online change.org petition attributed to a fictitious person and organization.

The online and offline campaigns -- which researchers say appear linked in their overlapping distribution, ad sponsoring and web hosting infrastructure -- illustrate the ease with which a person or an entire country can be tarnished in the age of disinformation while masking the ultimate perpetrators.

Joining the dots between the various campaigns led researchers and AFP down a rabbit hole to a series of characters -- from a Vietnamese hacker-for-hire to an influential educator and a Christian faith leader in the United States, all seemingly obscuring the trail to the brain behind them.

- 'Radioactive' -

The campaigns, which look well-resourced, appear designed to rile up sentiment against Qatar across the United States, Britain and European Union.

The apparent goal is to make any "institutional relationship with Qatar radioactive," said Sohan Dsouza, a London-based researcher formerly with the MIT Media Lab.

It could be taking advantage of the Israel-Hamas conflict to "advance a latent anti-Qatar agenda."

Among the new websites attacking the emirate in recent months is "Shame on Qatar" –- in English, French and Spanish –- which accuses it of funding terrorists and calls for a boycott of Qatari-owned icons such as Harrods, the Paris Saint-Germain football club and the New York Plaza hotel.

The site featured in an ad at the high-profile Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in February. The ad called for sanctions on Qatar and branded it as a security threat.

CPAC did not comment when asked who placed the ad.

Another site -- "It's in your hands" (IIYH) -- targets Qatar's queen mother, Sheikha Moza bint Nasser, accusing her country of supporting terrorists and criticizing her for failing to secure the release of Israeli hostages held in Hamas-run Gaza.

The queen mother has no official role in the emirate's mediation efforts.

The IIYH logo also popped up offline, appearing in February in an ad targeting the queen mother at New York's Times Square.

The billboard that featured the ad belongs to New York ad giant Outfront Media, according to separate open-source analyses by Dsouza and Doha-based disinformation researcher Marc Owen Jones.

Outfront Media did not respond when AFP inquired about the ad's sponsor.

- Fake petition -

The IIYH website links to a change.org petition targeting Qatar's queen mother. The petition is attributed to a man named "John Anderson," identified as the president of an organization called "Citizens of Humans (sic) Lives."

Both the man and the organization behind the petition -- signed by thousands -- are entirely made up, researchers said.

Earlier this year, US educator Katrina Lantos Swett tweeted a photo holding a poster of a similar campaign targeting the queen mother at a religious freedom summit in Washington, alongside the fake change.org petition.

A spokeswoman for Swett told AFP she was asked to promote the poster by Johnnie Moore -- an American evangelical leader, businessman, and advocate for Israel.

"We don't know who organized the campaign, nor is Katrina affiliated in any way," she said.

Moore, who describes himself on LinkedIn as a "peacemaker" known for his work "especially in the Middle East," may offer clues to the source of the campaign.

Moore initially accepted AFP's interview request via LinkedIn but stopped responding when confronted with Swett's claim and probed about his apparent association with the campaign.

- 'Blocked' -

With their power rivalries and conflicts, Middle East countries including Qatar are not strangers to information warfare and propaganda campaigns designed to gain an upper hand against perceived enemies.

Highlighting Gulf tensions, Qatar was blockaded from 2017 to 2021 by its neighbors who severed links over its alleged support for the Muslim Brotherhood and claims it was too close to Iran –- accusations that were rejected by Doha.

Qatar, which has hosted Hamas's political leadership since 2012 with the blessing of the United States, has recently sought to fend off global criticism over its behind-the-scenes talks on a possible truce in Gaza and the release of Israeli hostages.

In a massive operation on Meta-owned Facebook, researchers said, dozens of pages were used to host more than 900 anti-Qatar ads –- many calling for its political isolation and accusing it of promoting terrorism and stoking Muslim migration to Europe.

Meta said the coordinated activity originated in Vietnam and targeted audiences around the world.

"We found and removed this network" nearly two months ago, Margarita Franklin, Meta's security public affairs director, told AFP, adding that its findings will be posted in its quarterly threat report in August.

"We also blocked links to this campaign's websites and internet accounts from being shared on our platform."

- 'Proxy' -

But in a sign of their resilience, the ads still had a minimum reach of 41 million, researchers said, citing data from Facebook's ad library.

The ads -- in multiple languages including English, French, and Arabic –- cost up to $270,000, according to a conservative estimate by Jones and Dsouza.

The campaign was also active on X, TikTok, YouTube, Telegram as well as Wikimedia.

Vietnam is a known black market for trading hacked Facebook accounts for running ads, but researchers said it was not the source of the anti-Qatar operation.

"It's simply a proxy," Jones said.

Using data from Facebook's ad library, the researchers traced some of the pages to LT Media, a sketchy Vietnamese marketing outfit.

When contacted by AFP, an LT Media representative identifying himself as Le Van Tinh denied having run or knowing about the campaign, claiming that he sold the pages to unknown customers via Telegram.

He also claimed he himself got hacked and lost access to his Facebook "Business Manager," a centralized dashboard to manage multiple accounts, despite posting YouTube tutorials about bypassing such restrictions.

"I don't want to get into trouble," he wrote in a WhatsApp message.

"I am a middleman."

S.Saleem--DT