Why Not Qatar? Because Qatar Is an Agent of Chaos

Qatar is an agent of chaos, not only in the Middle East but also in Europe and the United States. It sees its mission as spreading anarchy throughout the world to promote Muslim Brotherhood rule in the Middle East and beyond. As we witness the anarchy in Israel, we wonder if it isn't a continuation of the Arab Storm, which brought the Brotherhood to power in Tripoli, Libya, President Morsi to Egypt, and al-Julani to Syria.
Qatar needs Ben Gvir and Smotrich as engines of anarchy in the Arab world and Europe, and to spread antisemitism in the United States. As a power promoting the Muslim Brotherhood in our region and globally, it appreciates the chaos potential of the "Jewish Brothers" in Israel. To advance regional and global chaos, it needs Hamas in Gaza and Ben Gvir on the Temple Mount—which is exactly what we're witnessing. Is this merely coincidental, or something more? It's impossible to know.
One of Qatar's primary tools for spreading anarchy in Arab countries has been Al Jazeera, whose role is to incite Arab citizens against their governments. Al Jazeera needs Jewish-Palestinian violence as a primary means of incitement, especially attempts to take over the Temple Mount.
Qatar as an agent of chaos is exactly what Netanyahu needs, because he too is an agent of chaos.
This might explain why Saudi Arabia is not participating in the Doha talks about hostage deals, and why bin Salman boycotted the "day after" summit in Cairo. Saudi Arabia's role is the opposite of Qatar's—it wants to stabilize the Middle East.
In the past, Saudi Arabia was also an agent of chaos, but when Al-Qaeda turned against it and began threatening Wahhabi legitimacy in Saudi Arabia itself, bin Salman changed course. He positioned Saudi Arabia as an anti-chaos force, a stabilizing factor wherever necessary, as in Lebanon now, where Saudi Arabia is beginning to replace Qatar's anarchistic funding with stabilizing Saudi funding.
Beyond the competition between chaos and stabilization in the Middle East, Saudi Arabia has a serious internal problem with Qatar.
Saudi Arabia's problem is its royal family structure, built from two different branches: the Sudairi branch, from which Saudi kings come, and the non-Sudairi branch, mostly from the Tamim tribe, which does not produce heirs to the throne.
This structure was built during the days of the founding father, King Abdul Aziz bin Saud, who married Sudairi princes to Tamim daughters to maintain the loyalty of non-Sudairi tribes. This created a structure of Tamimi princes ineligible for kingship versus Sudairi princes, from whom Saudi kings emerge.
The problem is that the Emir of Qatar, from the Tamim tribe, represents the Tamim tribe spread throughout the Middle East and possesses a doomsday weapon that could explode Saudi Arabia from within.
He already began stirring discord within the royal family during the Arab Storm. After Al Jazeera shook Egypt to its foundations, Egypt and Saudi Arabia planned to conquer Qatar and overthrow the Emir.
U.S. plans to establish an axis of Sunni states with Israel connecting India through the Gulf and Jordan to Israel could renew Qatar's subversion against Saudi Arabia. Why? Because the U.S. regional axis wants to establish a route bypassing Qatar, which is interested in connecting its gas reserves—which it shares with Iran—not to Israel but to Turkey. Qatar has already secured al-Julani's Syria for the Qatar-Turkey energy line and now needs to recruit Saudi Arabia (and Jordan), renewing its interest in destabilizing Saudi stability (and afterward Jordan).
When Saudi Arabia and Egypt planned to conquer Qatar during the Arab Storm, how great was the surprise that it was Israel that convinced the United States to dissuade Saudi Arabia and Egypt from their plans. From that moment, Egypt realized that perhaps the Israeli-Qatari connection was designed to overthrow the Egyptian regime and create anarchy in Egypt.
If there were suspicions in Egypt regarding Israel's intentions, it seems that from the moment Israel rushed to save Qatar, the doubts were removed, and Israel was marked as a potential enemy.
But who could have predicted then what is happening now—that while Egypt stabilizes, Israel is torn by anarchy. The Arab Storm has moved to Israel.