
US businessman Jared Kushner (L), White House Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff (C) and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio (R) attend a meeting between the US President Donald Trump and Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi at a summit on Gaza in Sharm el-Sheikh. AFP
In a CBS interview alongside Jared Kushner, Trump's son-in-law, who worked with Witkoff on the brokering of a Gaza ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas, the presidential envoy said he learned of the September 9 attack in Doha the morning after it happened.
Qatar is a key US ally and acted as mediator in the push to end the Gaza war.
"I think both Jared and I felt, I just feel we felt a little bit betrayed," Witkoff told the CBS news program "60 Minutes" in excerpts released Friday. The full interview is scheduled to air on Sunday.
At the time, the strike halted the indirect negotiating process to end the Israeli war in the Gaza Strip, which began in October 2023.
"It had a metastasising effect because the Qataris were critical to the negotiation, as were the Egyptians and the Turks," Witkoff said.
"We had lost the confidence of the Qataris. And so Hamas went underground, and it was very, very difficult to get to them."
Trump wrote on social media at the time that the decision to conduct the Doha air raid came from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Israel and Hamas ultimately accepted a 20-point peace plan presented by Trump that called for captive and prisoner releases and a ceasefire after two years of deadly conflict.
Under pressure from Trump during a White House visit this month, Netanyahu called Qatar's prime minister to apologise for the Doha strike.
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