A US version of the film, on the
Israel lobby in the United States, was made, in which an Al Jazeera reporter named James Anthony Kleinfeld had infiltrated several pro-Israel advocacy organizations in
Washington, D.C. including
Stand With Us,
Brandeis Center,
The Israel Project, the
Foundation for Defense of Democracies, the
Israel on Campus Coalition, the
Zionist Organization of America's (ZOA) Fuel For Truth, and the
Canary Mission. One of the major claims in the film is that Israeli-American
real estate investor Adam Milstein, a major donor to pro-Israel campus groups, funds Canary Mission, an anonymous website that records and shames people it believes "promote hatred of the USA, Israel and Jews on North American college campuses". Critics have accused Canary Mission of intimidating pro-Palestinian activists and threatening them with
blacklisting. The evidence for the claim is an exchange between Al Jazeera's undercover reporter "Tony" who is posing as an intern and Eric Gallagher, an employee at
The Israel Project: On February 8, 2018, it was reported that Qatari leaders had reassured the leaders of Jewish American organisations that Al Jazeera would not be airing the US companion series. According to
Haaretz, the Qatari government had reportedly hired
Republican Senator
Ted Cruz's former aide
Nicolas Muzin to open communications channels with Jewish American organisations. Earlier, the network had sent letters to several American pro-Israel organisations informing them that their employees would appear in the documentary. These letters generated speculation that the Qatari government had reneged on its earlier promise to block Al Jazeera from screening the controversial documentary which, like the earlier British series, had utilized clandestine footage and recordings of pro-Israel activists. Al Jazeera's decision not to screen the documentary drew criticism from Clayton Swisher, who accused the network of capitulation to outside pressure. Swisher said that the practice of using undercover investigators "is used by many international broadcasters, including BBC and CNN, and is carefully managed, through multiple layers of legal and editorial review, to ensure it is performed consistently with local laws, industry regulations, and our own Code of Ethics". Swisher took a sabbatical from Al Jazeera due to the network's failure to respond to attacks on the project and the lack of transparency around the network's decision to delay the broadcast. In March 2018, a bipartisan group of US lawmakers including
Democratic Congressman
Josh Gottheimer, Republican Congressman
Lee Zeldin, and Ted Cruz penned a letter urging
United States Attorney General Jeff Sessions to investigate whether Al Jazeera should register as a
foreign agent under the
Foreign Agents Registration Act. They also urged the
Justice Department to investigate reports that the network had infiltrated non-profit organisations and accused Al Jazeera of broadcasting antisemitic, anti-Israel, and anti-American content. On April 10, 2018, the Zionist Organization of America's president
Morton Klein claimed credit for lobbying the Qatari government not to screen Al Jazeera's companion documentary series focusing on American pro-Israel lobby. In late August and early September 2018, leaked portions of the documentary series were aired by several outlets including
The Electronic Intifada. In early November, The Electronic Intifada released the four episodes of
The Lobby—USA simultaneously with the French media outlet
Orient XXI and the Lebanese newspaper
Al Akhbar. Al Jazeera issued a statement condemning its release. == Reception ==