RIYADH,
Aug 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Saudi Chief of Staff
Lieutenant General Saleh al-Muhaya on Saturday met the commander of
the U.S. Air Forces Central Command, Lieutenant General T. Michael
Moseley, the official SPA agency reported.
The
talks, attended by other senior Saudi and U.S. officers, tackled
"issues of mutual concern for the two nations," SPA said.
Moseley,
responsible for developing contingency plans and conducting air
operations in an area stretching over 25 countries, commands more than
350 aircraft and 26,000 personnel.
The
U.S. military has about 5,000 troops in Saudi Arabia, most of them
airmen and several aircraft in order to enforce the internationally
condemned, U.S.-imposed no-fly zone over southern Iraq.
The
United States had coordinated last fall's air war over Afghanistan
from the brand-new combined command and control operations center at
Prince Sultan Air Base (PSAB), in Kharj, some 50 miles (80 kilometers)
south of the capital, Riyadh.
However,
Saudi Arabia has refused to allow any U.S. military strikes against
neighboring Iraq from its territory and warned its chief Western ally
of a human catastrophe and regional instability if Baghdad is
attacked.
In
the aftermath of the September 11 hijackings, carried out mainly by
Saudis, the U.S. media, following President George W. Bush’s public
declarations of an imminent attack on Iraq, have speculated that
Washington is preparing to transfer equipment and some of its troops
from Saudi Arabia to Qatar to bypass Saudi objections to any strike on
Baghdad.
The
meeting in Riyadh comes following last Monday’s meeting between
Qatar's army chief of staff, General Hamad bin Ali al-Attiya, and
Lieutenant-General Paul Mikolashek, commanding general of U.S. Armed
Forces Central Command (USARCENT), the official QNA news agency
reported.
Talks
between Attiya and Mikolashek, who also commands the U.S. Third Army,
focused on "bilateral cooperation and ways of developing and
boosting them," QNA said.
The
U.S. general's visit to Doha follows reports in the U.S. press that
Washington may use Qatar as a major base if war is unleashed against
Iraq.
There
has been mounting speculation that the United States is preparing to
transfer equipment and some of the 6,000 U.S. troops from Saudi Arabia
to Qatar to bypass Saudi objections to any strike on Baghdad.
But
the Pentagon has stressed that while some equipment might be
transferred to Qatar, U.S. forces will remain in Saudi Arabia, Agence
France-Presse (AFP) reported.
The
Al-Udeid air base, 20 miles (35 kilometers) southwest of Qatar's
capital, Doha, is the biggest facility used to stock U.S. munitions
and materials in the Gulf.
USARCENT,
the headquarters of which have been temporarily transferred to Kuwait,
is a subordinate part of Central Command (CENTCOM), which is
responsible for all military forces from East Africa to Central Asia.