When Mediation Becomes a Target: Sovereignty Norms, Extraterritorial Force, and the Doha 2025 Strike

Authors

  • Abdullah Hemmet Abdullah International Islamic University Malaysia image/svg+xml Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61212/

Keywords:

mediation targeting, sovereignty norms, extraterritorial force, Gulf security, alliance credibility, deterrence signaling, negotiation integrity

Abstract

This article analyzes the regional and geopolitical repercussions of Israel’s September 9, 2025 strike in Doha, Qatar, arguing that the episode marked a qualitative shift in regional conflict management: mediation venues and negotiators became targetable. Employing a qualitative case-study design with process tracing and discourse analysis, the study draws on official statements, United Nations materials, and regional diplomatic messaging to examine how the incident reshaped sovereignty contestation, deterrence signaling, alliance credibility, and Gulf security coordination. The theoretical framework integrates sovereignty and use-of-force debates with deterrence and signaling, alliance politics, and mediation theory, introducing the concept of the “mediator’s sanctuary” to capture expectations of protected negotiation space. Findings indicate a threefold shock: a legitimacy crisis around territorial integrity and accountability; an alliance-credibility stress test that amplified hedging and defense diversification pressures across GCC states; and an institutional shock to mediation integrity that reduced confidence in ceasefire diplomacy and increased risks of bargaining breakdown and escalation. The article concludes with policy implications for safeguarding mediation processes, strengthening GCC crisis coordination, and clarifying prohibitions against targeting negotiators and host territory.

Author Biography

  • Abdullah Hemmet Abdullah, International Islamic University Malaysia

     

     

    Prof. Dr. Abdullah Hemmet is an Associate Professor of Islamic Thought and Civilization and currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Religious Studies with a specialization in Islamic Thought and Civilization. He also teaches International Law, Commercial Law, and Economic Policy. He holds a Doctor of Business Administration (DBA) in Leadership and Corporate Governance. At the Islamic University of Minnesota (IUM), he serves as a member of the Promotion Committee and as Chair of the Scientific Committee for Curriculum Development at the Faculty of Islamic Studies. His research interests include Islamic theology, the objectives of Islamic law (maqāṣid al-sharīʿah), and Islamic renewal and reform (tajdīd and ijtihād). He also focuses on contemporary issues such as Muslim identity, extremism, interfaith dialogue, educational reform, and religious pluralism. Prof. Dr. Hemmet has published numerous scholarly articles in international peer-reviewed journals and is currently working on several academic books under publication.

     

     

     

References

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Published

2026-03-01

How to Cite

When Mediation Becomes a Target: Sovereignty Norms, Extraterritorial Force, and the Doha 2025 Strike. (2026). Journal of Scientific Development for Studies and Research (JSD), 7(25), 234-255. https://doi.org/10.61212/

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