Paul William Harmon Profile picture
May 15, 2025 15 tweets 6 min read Read on X
Before 1996, Qatar was a barren desert of 320k people

Yesterday, they casually spent $96B on Boeing Jets - the largest purchase in history

Their $450B fund owns more of London than the British Royal Family

How desert rulers engineered the West's silent takeover: Image
Image
The journey starts with a "disappointing" discovery.

In 1971, Qatar and Shell found something beneath the Persian Gulf they thought was worthless.

Not oil (which they wanted). Just natural gas.

But this disappointing find would change everything:
They'd stumbled upon the North Field—the largest natural gas reservoir ever discovered.

This field contains about 10% of global gas reserves.

Qatar couldn't do much with it yet. The technology to export gas profitably didn't exist.

It sat untapped for decades...
Then in 1995, everything changed.

Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani overthrew his father in a bloodless coup.

The new leader saw potential in that untapped gas field.

He made a $20B bet on liquefied natural gas when experts called it foolish:
The gamble paid off spectacularly.

By 2006, Qatar became the world's largest LNG exporter.

Their GDP per capita soared from $2,755 in 1990 to over $50,000 by 2020.

Billions flooded into the tiny nation monthly.

What they did with that money was remarkable:
Qatar deployed cash strategically worldwide.

They created the Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) in 2005—one of the most aggressive sovereign funds ever.

Their London shopping spree was unprecedented:
• Bought Harrods for $2B
• Acquired stake in Canary Wharf
• Built The Shard—Western Europe's tallest building
• Bought 20% of Heathrow Airport
• Acquired Chelsea Barracks

But they didn't stop at London:
Qatar purchased Paris Saint-Germain and made it a global powerhouse.

They acquired a 10.5% stake in Volkswagen Group.

They built Qatar Airways into one of the world's top airlines.

All from a country smaller than Connecticut.
Their most brilliant move? Creating Al Jazeera in 1996.

With a $137M grant, it revolutionized Arabic media and expanded globally.

This single investment gave Qatar unprecedented soft power across the Middle East.

But there's a darker side:
Qatar's transformation required massive labor.

The solution? Import millions of workers from South Asia.

Today, 88% of Qatar's 2.8M residents are foreign workers without citizenship.

Many face conditions that human rights groups have condemned.
The nation performs a dangerous balancing act.

They host America's largest Mideast military base while maintaining ties with Iran.

In 2017, Saudi Arabia blockaded Qatar for 3.5 years, accusing them of supporting terrorism.

Qatar survived by reshaping supply chains.
Their natural gas gamble keeps paying off.

When Russia invaded Ukraine, Europeans desperate for non-Russian gas turned to Qatar.

In 2019, Qatar launched a $30B North Field expansion to increase LNG exports 64% by 2026.

Perfect timing.
This unlikely power broker shows how wealth transforms global influence.

With just 320,000 citizens, Qatar wields power on par with nations 100x its size.

Money, deployed strategically, creates influence that transcends limitations.

A masterclass in leverage.
I am Paul Harmon:

• COO/President & operational strategist in tech
• Leadership mentor focused on scaling high-performance teams
• Champion of data-driven decision making & sustainable growth

Come say hi to me on Linkedin!
linkedin.com/in/paulharmon/ x.com/18215991053046…
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More from @TheHarmonX

Jun 24, 2025
In 1973, FedEx was losing $30,000 per day.

They had $5,000 in the bank and a $24,000 fuel bill due Monday.

389 employees were about to lose their jobs.

Here's how the founder's Vegas blackjack run saved them all: Image
First, let's set the scene.

FedEx launched April 17th, 1973 with a revolutionary idea: overnight delivery using their own planes.

Fred Smith's concept was brilliant.

While competitors used passenger airlines, FedEx flew at night when airports were empty:
The timing couldn't have been worse.

Just as FedEx was getting off the ground, OPEC hit the US with an oil embargo.

Fuel prices quadrupled overnight.

FedEx's 14 planes were burning through cash faster than they could generate revenue:
Read 15 tweets
Jun 17, 2025
Visa doesn't lend money, own banks, or take deposits.

Yet it's one of the world's most valuable financial companies.

It makes money every time you swipe or tap.

Here's how they built a monopoly by owning nothing: Image
In 2023, Visa processed $14.8 trillion in transactions.

That's more money flowing through one network than most countries' entire economies.

But this empire started in the most unlikely place...
1928 California.

An Italian immigrant grocer named Amadeo Gianini owns a small bank.

He lends money to other immigrants when established banks won't.

His radical vision will eventually reshape how the world handles money:
Read 14 tweets
Jun 12, 2025
Boeing hasn't made a profit since 2018.

Airbus has been profitable every year since the pandemic.

The gap between them is now worth billions of dollars.

Here's how Airbus became the world's biggest plane maker: Image
This is one of the greatest business comebacks in history.

Airbus entered the market decades after Boeing.

Today, 76% of the world's fleet is made up of Airbus and Boeing planes.

But here's what makes this story incredible...
Airbus has a backlog of 8,726 planes compared to Boeing's 5,643.

That represents almost 13 years of work to complete.

But this dominance started with one crucial decision in the 1970s:
Read 19 tweets
May 29, 2025
OpenAI just made the biggest bet in company history.

$6.5 billion for 1 designer and his 55-person team.

They're building devices that move us "beyond screens."

Here's what the future looks like when AI meets the genius behind the iPhone: Image
First, some context about what just happened.

OpenAI acquired io, a device startup that Sam Altman and Jony Ive have been secretly building for 2 years.

The deal values io at $6.5 billion in all-equity.

It's OpenAI's largest acquisition ever...
Jony Ive is the designer behind Apple's most iconic products.

iPhones, iPods, iPads, Apple Watches.

His design philosophy shaped how billions of people interact with technology.

Now he's bringing that genius to AI hardware:
Read 14 tweets
May 27, 2025
Sir Demis Hassabis is the most dangerous CEO alive:

• Chess prodigy at age 4
• Knighted in 2023 for services to AI
• Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2024

He now leads Google's DeepMind AI

His vision of the next 10 years will terrify you 🧵 Image
When Hassabis makes predictions, you should listen.

He co-founded DeepMind in 2010 with a bold 20-year mission to build AGI.

13 years later, they're exactly on track.

His team has delivered breakthrough after breakthrough:
• Google AlphaFold solved protein structure prediction
• Multiple foundational AI research advances

Every major breakthrough traces back to rigorous DeepMind research.

When he talks AGI timelines, he's earned the right to be heard:
Read 15 tweets
May 20, 2025
Coinbase just lost $400M in the most embarrassing way possible:

Their own employees sold out customer data to hackers.

CEO Brian Armstrong had 2 choices: pay the $20M ransom or fight back.

His response in the next 24 hours shocked the entire industry.

Here's the wild story: Image
In January, hackers found a simple backdoor to Coinbase customer data:

The company's own employees.

They bribed contract workers in customer support, offering cash for sensitive user information.

This continued for nearly 5 months undetected. Image
The breach exposed the most sensitive data:
• Names and contact info
• Government-issued ID images
• Crypto balances and transaction history
• Geographic location data

This wasn't just a privacy issue – it created physical danger.
Read 16 tweets

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