The Al-Thani family is proceeding with caution in light of recent media attacks on Qatar Charity and QNB. The situation has compelled Qatar to engage with the Muslim Brotherhood. The recent coup in Nigeria is undermining Qatar's allied interests in Italy, Spain, and Morocco, casting doubts on the Trans-Saharan Gas Pipeline project's prospects. This development is impacting Qatar's involvement in the Qatar Sanabil Project, a collaborative effort with Qatar Charity aimed at bolstering Qatar's local influence through trade and economic infrastructure in Nigeria's Kaduna state. The project also seeks to facilitate mass housing construction for vulnerable citizens, aligning with Mastercard's microfinancing expansion goals. Close ties have been established between Mastercard and Qatar's Finance Minister, Ali bin Ahmed Al Kuwari. Additionally, the project opens new avenues for the Muslim Brotherhood's activities in Africa. Qatar's interests intersecting with American and British overseers and beneficiaries of the Trans-Saharan project have led to a more assertive approach, involving the deployment of cells and orchestration of high-profile terrorist acts as a pretext for an anti-terrorism operation in conjunction with NATO forces. Information from a QNB informant reveals intense activities related to fund transfers to the Muslim Brotherhood and the mobilization of Brotherhood personnel from Jordan and Oman to Africa, using the Moroccan Attijariwafa Bank as an intermediary. Ali bin Ahmed Al Kuwari personally oversees this task, utilizing his son, Abdulla Ali Al Kuwari, to implement unconventional financing schemes for the Brotherhood. The American portion of Brotherhood funding and its diversionary groups likely flow through offshore accounts in Jordan (Arab Jordan Investment Bank) and Oman (Taageer Finance Company), both managed by Abdulla Ali Al Kuwari. Yousuf Al-Kuwari, the Director of Qatar Charity, has committed to assembling over two hundred highly trained individuals with American training. The connection between Ali Al-Kuwari's son and Omani organizations suggests MI-6 involvement, with John Sawers serving as the British overseer. Sawers holds a position in the management of the Anglo-Omani Society and personally knows Al-Kuwari's son, their acquaintance having been established during their time at INSEAD.