Loretta Lynch hopes for Qatar's cooperation in FIFA World Cup probe

LONDON (AP) — The United States hopes Qatar will cooperate with the World Cup bidding investigation, Attorney General Loretta Lynch said on Wednesday, insisting
Loretta Lynch hopes for Qatar's cooperation in FIFA World Cup probe
Loretta Lynch hopes for Qatar's cooperation in FIFA World Cup probe /

LONDON (AP) — The United States hopes Qatar will cooperate with the World Cup bidding investigation, Attorney General Loretta Lynch said on Wednesday, insisting that the Gulf nation being a key ally in the fight against Islamic State militants was irrelevant in any considerations about pursuing a corruption case.

The U.S. is working closely on the FIFA investigation with Swiss authorities, whose case started by probing the dual votes for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups five years ago.

Qatar's 2022 bid, rather than Russia's successful 2018 campaign, has been subject to the heaviest scrutiny amid waves of bribery allegations, as yet unproven.

"We will follow the facts and the evidence where it leads us," Lynch said at a briefing in London. "And regardless of who is handling that investigation, whether it's us or the Swiss, I think that Qatar's role in it would hopefully be cooperative."

Qatar's vast al-Udeid air base outside the capital, Doha, serves as the forward headquarters for U.S. Central Command, and hosts dozens of aircraft participating in the U.S.-led campaign targeting the Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq.

The importance of the military installation to the U.S. was highlighted by first lady Michelle Obama visiting last month, but Lynch said diplomatic and military relations with Qatar are not a factor in deciding whether to act on any evidence of corruption in the World Cup vote.

"I think that we make our considerations based on the considerations of the case, based on the evidence, based on the facts, and based on what's appropriate to handle if we were to discover a problem or corruption or a violation of law that led to a US case," Lynch said. "We would move on that basis."

Lynch has spearheaded the U.S. Department of Justice investigation into soccer corruption, which erupted in public in May when 14 people were indicted including FIFA executives. A further 16 men were charged last week over bribes and kickbacks, with two FIFA vice presidents arrested while in Zurich for an executive committee meeting.

The U.S. expressed disappointment that one of those vice presidents—CONMEBOL President Juan Angel Napout—"sought to portray himself as an agent of reform" at FIFA while allegedly profiting from corruption.

"It is incumbent upon FIFA to ensure they have the appropriate screening processes, and that they have enough of a view of the specific methodologies that they need to adopt, that regardless of where they come from, there are methodologies and compliance mechanisms that will make the organization stronger," Lynch said at the international affairs think-tank Chatham House where she delivered a speech on the global fight against terrorism.

The North and Central American and Caribbean Confederation has seen its past three leaders indicted in the U.S. bribery case, with acting president Alfredo Hawit of Honduras the latest to be detained. With such mistrust surrounding CONCACAF in particular, the body decided this week it would go without a president until May.

"You have to judge people by their actions and see how the next round of leadership handles this responsibility because it is a responsibility both in terms of CONCACAF in particular, CONMEBOL also, but FIFA as a larger organization," Lynch said. "People have to be vigilant, and the organization has to be prepared to take action itself in terms of holding its leaders accountable."

Lynch declined to discuss suspended FIFA President Sepp Blatter, who is a target of the U.S. case but has not been formally named. Blatter is being investigated by the Swiss over a payment to Michel Platini which led to the UEFA president also being suspended by FIFA.

Although the U.S. investigation involves alleged corruption in the Brazilian soccer leadership, Lynch would not comment if they have uncovered any wrongdoing involving deals connected to the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

GALLERY: Faces of the FIFA scandal

Faces of the FIFA Scandal

Sepp Blatter

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Elyxandro Cegarra/Panoramic/Icon Sportswire

FIFA president

Jerome Valcke

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Dmitry Lovetsky/AP

FIFA general secretary

Michel Platini

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Shaun Botterill/Getty Images

UEFA president; FIFA Vice President; FIFA presidential hopeful

Jack Warner

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Sean Drakes/LatinContent/Getty Images

Ex–CONCACAF president; FIFA Vice President

Jeffrey Webb

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Matt Rourke/AP

Ex–Cayman Islands federation and CONCACAF president; FIFA Vice President

Chuck Blazer

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Mike Hewitt/FIFA via Getty Images

Ex-CONCACAF general secretary; FIFA executive committee

Alfredo Hawit

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Orlando Sierra/AFP/Getty Images

CONCACAF President; FIFA vice president, executive committee; Former president, Honduras football federation

Juan Angel Napout

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Martin Rose/FIFA/Getty Images

CONMEBOL president, FIFA vice president, executive committee; Former president, Paraguay football federation

Jose Luis Meiszner

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Juan Mabromata/AFP/Getty Images

CONMEBOL general secretary

Marco Polo del Nero

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Buda Mendes/Getty Images

Former FIFA executive committee; President, Brazil football federation

Ricardo Teixeira

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Michael Regan/Getty Images

Former FIFA executive committee; Former president, Brazil football federation

Eduardo Li

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Jamie McDonald/FIFA via Getty Images

Ex–Costa Rica federation president; FIFA, CONCACAF executive committees

Eugenio Figueredo

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Alan Diaz/AP

Ex–Uruguay federation and CONMEBOL president; FIFA Vice President

Jose Maria Marin

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Buda Mendes/Getty Images

Ex–Brazil federation president; CONMEBOL executive committee

Rafael Salguero

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Alexander Hassenstein/FIFA/Getty Images

Former FIFA executive committee; Former president, Guatemalan football federation

Manuel Burga

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Ernesto Benavides/AFP/Getty Images

FIFA development committee; Former president, Peru football federation

Ariel Alvarado

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Arnulfo Franco/AP

Former president, Panama football federation; FIFA disciplinary committee

Eduardo Deluca

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LatinContent/STR/Getty Images

Former CONMEBOL, Argentina football federation general secretary

Luís Chiriboga

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Rodrigo Buendia/AFP/Getty Images

CONMEBOL executive committee; President, Ecuador football federation

Rafael Callejas

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Clive Mason/FIFA/Getty Images

FIFA television and marketing committee; Former president, Honduras; Former president, Honduras football federation

Rafael Esquivel

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Leo Ramirez/AFP/Getty Images

Ex–Venezuela federation president; CONMEBOL executive committee

Carlos Chavez

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Aizar Raldes/AFP/Getty Images

CONMEBOL treasurer; Former president, Bolivia football federation

Nicolas Leoz

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Jorge Saenz/AP

Ex–CONMEBOL president, FIFA executive committee

Julio Rocha

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Esteban Felix/AP

Ex–Nicaragua federation and Central American Football Union president

Romer Osuna

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Aizar Raldes/AFP/Getty Images

FIFA audit and compliance committee; Former CONMEBOL treasurer.

Alejandro Burzaco

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Don Emmert/AFP/Getty Images

CEO of Torneos y Competencias

Aaron Davidson

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Kevin Hagen/AP

President, Traffic Sports USA

Hugo Jinkis

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Maxi Failla/AP

President, Full Play Group

Mariano Jinkis

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Maxi Failla/AP

Vice President, Full Play Group

Loretta Lynch

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Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

U.S. Attorney General

Michael Lauber

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Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images

Switzerland Attorney General


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