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U.S. Military Official in Qatar Amidst Reports of Using Al-Udeid to Strike Iraq

Al-Udeid air base hosts around 3,000 U.S. troops and 50 planes 

DOHA, August 12 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Qatar's army chief of staff, General Hamad bin Ali al-Attiya, held talks Sunday, August 11, with U.S. Representative David Hobson, chairman of the house's subcommittee on military construction, the official QNA news agency said.

Their talks focused on "bilateral cooperation and ways to develop it in all spheres," it said, without giving any further details.

Hobson's visit follows reports in the U.S. press that Washington may use Qatar as a major base if war is unleashed against Iraq, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

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.

The Al-Udeid air base, 35 kilometers (20 miles) southwest of Qatar's capital Doha, is the biggest facility used to stock U.S. munitions and materiel in the Arabian Gulf. 

Due to the Saudi refusal to be a launch pad for strikes on its neighbor, Baghdad, the U.S. has been investing money and labor into its $1.4 billion airbase, news agencies reported.

Qatar has publicly opposed any attack on Iraq.

"We cannot say when or how the facilities would be used...but as far as the progress of work is concerned, it is almost 80 percent complete and I guess it should be ready by the year-end," a U.S. official who declined to be named told news agencies.

According to Tommy  Franks, the commander of U.S. Central Command, the base was being developed for "times of crisis."

The Al-Udeid base is a state-of-the-art military facility that is capable of carrying out and controlling thousands of air strikes on a daily basis, which gives the U.S. an alternative to the Saudi military bases.

Speaking Sunday to Fox News, Senator Fred Thompson, a Republican member of the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee, said the United States did not need Saudi Arabian bases for an attack on Iraq, reported news agencies.

"There are other countries in that area that we can use. We're in the Gulf there already. I don't think we have to have them [Saudi bases] in order to do that," he said. 

CNN reported that the U.S. expects to be given permission to fly through Saudi airspace if it attacks Iraq.

Saudi Arabia’s public position, reported CNN, is that any regime change in Iraq should come from the Iraqi people, not outside military action.

CNN quoted Pentagon sources as saying that if the United States goes to war against Iraq, it would hope for support from Saudi Arabia in three areas: over flight rights for attack planes, use of a high-tech command center at Prince Sultan air base; and some logistics and refueling support.

All of these could be provided quietly, while the Saudi government maintained a public stance of neutrality, officials said, reported CNN.

Construction work at Al-Udeid started three years ago but was switched into top gear in November after Saudi Arabia refused to let U.S. planes and troops heading to Afghanistan use the Prince Sultan base. The U.S. resorted to launching attacks from its Fifth Fleet facilities off Bahrain, and Al-Udeid – then a make-shift complex of tents and capable of housing 40 aircraft.

The past nine months have transformed Al-Udeid into a state-of-the-art facility with one of the longest runways in the Middle East, at 4,500 meters (14,760 ft). It can accommodate up to 120 fighter jets, U.S. officials say.

The airbase has three hardened concrete underground shelters which can each hold 40 aircraft capable of operating even if the base came under biological or chemical attack.

Al-Udeid stands next to a sprawling arms warehouse, where Central Command has stored tanks, armored personnel carriers and enough weapons to equip a whole brigade.

Al-Udeid hosts around 3,000 U.S. troops and 50 planes. Officials say once complete, it will be home to 10,000 troops.

The United States has several Gulf bases, mainly in Bahrain, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, which alone hosts about 5,000 troops.

During the 1991 Gulf War, Saudi Arabia's Prince Sultan airbase was the operations center for U.S. troops taking part in the U.S.-led multi-national coalition which launched a massive war on Iraq with the aim of liberating of Kuwait.

 

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