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CNN’s New Qatar-Based Studio Raises Eyebrows — and Questions

Iran’s then-Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and Qatari Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani enter a hall for a joint news conference, in Tehran, Iran, July 6, 2022. Photo: Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS

CNN’s latest series, produced in its new Doha-based studio, is causing quite a stir.

Not only has the first installment of CNN Creators been panned by viewers for its “cringiness” and seeming lack of journalistic depth, but it is also raising questions about the relationship between the American news network and the Qatari state.

As reported by Eliana Johnson and Collin Anderson of The Washington Free Beacon, CNN Creators is the first show to be aired from the network’s new studio, in a media complex located in the Qatari capital and funded by the emirate.

When CNN first announced its move to Media City in February 2025, it told The Free Beacon that Qatar would fund “facilities and technical support” while CNN would maintain editorial control over the content that is produced there. The network also clarified that any sponsored content would be labeled as such.

At the time, these claims appeared naive, if not downright laughable. Qatar has strict rules concerning what can and cannot be broadcast in its country. In particular, there is a heavy restriction on the airing of criticism of the government or publishing items that the state deems “harmful.”

Due to its repressive nature, Freedom House’s 2025 profile gave Qatar a “1 out of 4” rating for media independence, which contributed to it being designated as “not free” and at the lower end of Freedom House’s rankings (below Iraq and Pakistan, and just above Haiti and Djibouti).

Even during the 2022 soccer World Cup, Qatar placed various restrictions on foreign journalists covering the event from inside the emirate. One can only imagine the editorial restrictions that would be placed on foreign journalists who open up a permanent bureau there.

Now that the first episode of CNN’s Qatar-based broadcast has aired, it appears that qualms about the legendary American network basing itself in a repressive state like Qatar were well-justified.

Its flagship program, CNN Creators, focuses on four relatively unknown, young, and hip CNN journalists marveling at all that the Qatari capital has to offer in such overt displays of fawning that it would make Walter Duranty blush.

Is this journalism or a Qatari tourism advertisement for the TikTok generation?

Aside from its “infantilizing” content, CNN’s Doha studio broadcast raises several key questions for the network and Western journalism at large:

  • Can CNN truly maintain editorial independence while broadcasting content from a repressive state like Qatar?
  • Will CNN’s Doha-based coverage only show a positive side of Qatar, or will it also deal with the dark side of the emirate, such as modern-day slavery and support for terror groups like Hamas?
  • Will the existence of the Doha studio influence CNN’s programming outside of Qatar? Will coverage of Israel, Saudi Arabia, or any other topic in which it has an interest promote a Qatar-friendly narrative?
  • CNN appears to be the first major Western outlet to set itself up in the government-sponsored Media City. Will other American and Western news organizations follow?

These are all important questions that must be reckoned with by those who support independent journalism.

With Qatar continually extending its influence in the United States and around the world, can we continue to trust CNN and other potential media partners of Qatar to publish independent content, or will they become watered-down versions of state propaganda outlets like Al Jazeera and Russia Today?

The author is a contributor to HonestReporting, a Jerusalem-based media watchdog with a focus on antisemitism and anti-Israel bias — where a version of this article first appeared.

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I Have Worked With the Heritage Foundation — but Embracing Antisemitism Will Doom America

Tucker Carlson speaks on July 18, 2024, during the final day of the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Photo: Jasper Colt-USA TODAY via Reuters Connect

The Heritage Foundation is the country’s leading conservative think tank. President Donald Trump’s last campaign platform was partly dreamed up in its sleek Capitol Hill headquarters. Thousands of young people, myself included, have gained valuable knowledge and experience via Heritage’s various programs. What it does and says matters.

And what it did and said last week endangers not just the Jewish community — but our country’s social fabric.

That might come as a surprise. After all, Heritage recently launched its laudable Project Esther, a national strategy to “combat the scourge of antisemitism in the United States.” 

Heritage’s detailed blueprint was published following an onslaught of anti-Jewish violence and rhetoric after the October 7th massacre, particularly from the anti-Israel far-left and those who endorse Hamas and other Islamist terrorist groups.

Among Project Esther’s aims are to “erode support for antisemitic behavior, expose the individuals and organizations supporting such conduct to discourage it, and laud the individuals and organizations effectively countering it to encourage others to join.”

Last week, though, Heritage incentivized precisely the opposite behavior.

In an on-camera statement shared on X, Heritage President Kevin Roberts told followers: “We will always defend truth, we will always defend America, and we will always defend our friends against the slander of bad actors who serve someone else’s agenda. That includes Tucker Carlson, who remains, and, as I have said before, always will be, a close friend of the Heritage Foundation.”

The statement was posted less than 48 hours after Carlson, who began his career at the think tank, took much-deserved criticism for holding a softball interview with far-right podcaster, antisemite, and Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes.

Responding to widespread concerns about the interview, Roberts complained of a “venomous coalition attempting to cancel” Carlson, adding that the right should not “cancel its own people.” Christians, he said, “can critique the state of Israel without being antisemitic.”

But it is false to conflate the Carlson-Fuentes interview and its overt anti-Jewish rhetoric with mere “critique” of Israel, and it is equally dishonest to suggest in turn that the speakers are mere “Israel critics.”

Both Carlson and Fuentes crossed that line long ago — and that is precisely why Heritage’s continuing proximity to them is a problem.

This is not new territory for Carlson. My organization, CAMERA, which takes no stances on partisan political issues, has outlined the ex-Fox News host’s grim pattern of appeasing anti-Jewish figures and myths.

In August, Carlson uncritically platformed an Orthodox nun who framed Hamas as a legitimate “resistance” organization, fawned over an antisemitic “poet,” and promoted laughably flimsy historical claims such as the idea that Palestinians, rather than Jews, were the first people to become Christians.

Then there was Carlson’s cozy chat with Lutheran pastor Munther Isaac, who blamed a relative collapse in Bethlehem’s Christian population on Israel rather than the Palestinian Authority’s misrule.

Carlson has also lately alluded to baseless conspiracy theories that Israel was behind Charlie Kirk’s assassination (Carlson has since been working with Kirk’s Turning Point USA.)

Carlson’s decision to play chummy with Fuentes, therefore, is nothing new.

Fuentes, an Internet figure with hundreds of thousands of followers, has called Adolf Hitler “really f***ing cool,” and said that if his movement gained power, it would execute “perfidious Jews.”

In 2019, Fuentes used an analogy of the Cookie Monster baking cookies in an attempt to deny the murder of 6 million Jews in the Holocaust. His followers, known as the “Groypers,” routinely expressed their support for Fuentes by using the acronym “RKD4NJF,” which stands for “Rape, kill, and die for Nicholas Joseph Fuentes.” Carlson can hardly claim plausible deniability over Fuentes’s chilling record.

Fuentes used the podcast appearance with Carlson to argue that “organized Jewry in America” was a “big challenge.”

Fuentes did not level any criticism toward a particular Jewish organization or campaign group, just “Jewry” as a whole. Carlson, once known for his abrasive interview style, failed to push back against Fuentes, but instead joined in by charging that Christian Zionists had a “brain virus” and that he “dislike[d] them more than anybody.”

Kevin Roberts’ claim that his movement must “focus on its political opponents” simply does not align with his claim that truth must prevail.

If truth is a central value, Roberts should recognize Tucker and Fuentes — who are enemies of the truth — as “opponents.”

If antisemitism were something worth opposing, Roberts should speak out against it wherever in the media and political ecosystem it arises.

Some may perceive Roberts’ remarks as a fleeting public relations blip. Unfortunately, they reveal something more sinister.

As memories of the Second World War wane and libels regarding Israel are showcased daily by the mainstream media, antisemitism as an organized movement is ripe for a renaissance in the West. Too many major institutions, on both the Left and Right, are now either afraid to call it out — or are increasingly sympathetic to it.

D.C. policy wonks do not necessarily represent the views of ordinary people, but they are important political and cultural arbiters, suggesting to people what is acceptable, with potentially huge consequences. If these influencers are beginning to warm to the “Groypers” and their apologists, they must be called out and confronted, whatever their historically lofty stature.

Furthermore, we cannot simply ignore Carlson and Fuentes as Internet trolls. Both have huge followings, in part because they spread easily digestible lies about Israel and Jews. This needs robust pushback by all of us who genuinely care about “defending truth,” or our media and politics will be doomed to failure.

As Harvard professor Ruth Wisse notes: “Antisemitism is not about the Jews, but about those who organize politics against them. And any society governed by that ideology is doomed.” We must help Washington heed this warning.

​Georgia L. Gilholy is a member of the Communications Team at the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting and Analysis (CAMERA).

The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of CAMERA.

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Turkey, Hamas Team Discuss Next Gaza Plan Phases, Security Sources Say

The Beaver Moon supermoon rises above destroyed buildings amid a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, in Gaza City, Nov. 5, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas

Turkey‘s MIT intelligence agency chief met Hamas‘s negotiating team head Khalil Al-Hayya on Wednesday, and they discussed the path to be followed in implementing the next phases of the Gaza ceasefire plan, Turkish security sources said.

They said MIT chief Ibrahim Kalin met the Hamas delegation in Istanbul and they also discussed steps to ensure smooth operation of the ceasefire process and how to overcome existing problems.

Turkey, a longtime state backer of Hamas, has been pushing to have a significant role in Gaza’s reconstruction, including through military forces on the ground to help implement US President Donald Trump’s peace plan.

Israel has adamantly opposed such efforts, noting Turkey’s support for Hamas and hostile stance toward the Jewish state.

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Two French Nationals Freed by Iran Under ‘Islamic Clemency,’ Iran’s Foreign Minister Says

A woman walks past posters with the portraits of Cecile Kohler and Jacques Paris, two French citizens held in Iran, on the day of support rallies to mark their three-year detention and to demand their release, in front of the National Assembly in Paris, France, May 7, 2025. The slogan reads “Freedom for Cecile Kohler and Jacques Paris.” Photo: REUTERS/Abdul Saboor

Two French citizens were freed because of “Islamic clemency” and are still in Iran, Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi told state media on Wednesday.

French President Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday that Iran had released Cecile Kohler and her partner Jacques Paris, who were detained in Iran for over three years and were convicted of spying.

The two are currently at the French embassy in Iran, Araqchi said, adding an Iranian woman freed by Paris earlier this year is at the Iranian embassy in France.

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