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    Home»Politics»Middle East»Leaders gather for Arab-Islamic summit in Qatar after Israel’s Doha attack
    Middle East

    Leaders gather for Arab-Islamic summit in Qatar after Israel’s Doha attack

    Gulf News WeekBy Gulf News WeekSeptember 14, 2025Updated:September 14, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Leaders gather for Arab-Islamic summit in Qatar after Israel’s Doha attack
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    Qatar seeks a collective response to Israel, which has attacked several other countries as it pummels Gaza.

    Leaders from across the region are gathering in the Qatari capital to discuss a formal response to Israel’s strikes on Doha last week, which it said targeted Hamas leadership and reverberated through the Middle East and beyond.

    Israel launched the missiles as Hamas members gathered in their Doha office to discuss a deal proposed by United States President Donald Trump to end Israel’s two-year genocidal war on Gaza.

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    The attack came hours after Israel’s Foreign Minister Gideon Saar claimed Israel had accepted the Trump proposal, which would release all 48 captives held by Hamas in Gaza in exchange for Palestinian prisoners held by Israel and a ceasefire.

    Israel killed five Hamas members and a Qatari security official in the attack, although it did not kill the Hamas leadership it said it was targeting.

    The United Nations Security Council unanimously condemned the attack on Thursday.

    How is Qatar responding?

    Qatar has invited leaders from Arab and Islamic countries for meetings that will culminate in the emergency Arab-Islamic summit on Monday.

    Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Majed bin Mohammed al-Ansari told Qatar News Agency (QNA) that “the summit will discuss a draft resolution on the Israeli attack” that signifies another instance of “state terrorism practised by Israel”.

    A meeting of foreign ministers on Sunday will work on the draft, which is expected to add to the international chorus of condemnation for the Israeli attack.

    Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani, who met Trump in New York on Friday, said Qatar will pursue a collective response to the attack, which has put the entire region at risk.

    Qatar has long had a mediation role, working to end Israel’s war on Gaza and generate regional unity.

    In the meetings on Sunday and Monday, it will leverage pro-Palestinian sentiment and opposition to Israel’s attacks that have been expressed across the region.

    Who is attending?

    Leaders from the 57-member Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and the 22-member Arab League will attend.

    Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian is confirmed to attend, as are Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim.

    On Saturday, Iran’s security chief Ali Larijani issued what he called a “warning to Islamic governments” and said they must “form a ‘joint operations room’ against the madness” of Israel instead of resorting to mere statements.

    The full list of dignitaries in attendance on Monday is yet to be confirmed.

    What can come out of the summit?

    At the summit, a strongly worded statement against Israel is guaranteed.

    The leaders will discuss potential ways they could take action to address Israeli aggression across the region.

    Israel has also bombed Iran, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen as its genocidal war on Gaza and military raids on the occupied West Bank continue relentlessly.

    The sense of security enjoyed by Qatar and neighbouring states has been shattered, which could prompt them to seek new security or defence arrangements with the US that go beyond buying arms.

    There are political considerations at play, however, especially with Washington still offering ironclad support to Israel despite growing international frustration.

    As ministers and leaders arrived in Doha on Sunday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio travelled to Israel to meet Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other top leaders. Among other things, they are likely to discuss plans to annex large parts of the West Bank.

    That plan has been described by the United Arab Emirates, a member of the US-sponsored Abraham Accords to normalise ties with Israel, as a “red line” that would undermine the agreement.

    Saudi Arabia and other regional states being eyed by Israel and the US as future members of the Accords are seen by analysts to be the furthest they have been for years from normalising relations with Israel.

    Among the tools that states have at their disposal to respond to rogue aggression are acts like downgrading diplomatic ties.

    Arab states like Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the UAE also have vast financial capabilities at their disposal as leverage, as well as large sovereign wealth funds with international investments that could impose curbs on Israel, including trade limitations.

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    Qatar has said part of its response will be legal, including through pursuing Israeli violations of international law.

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