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Hamad denied differences with Saudi Arabia were prompted by Qatar’s wooing the U.S. by giving it free hand in Al-Udied airbase
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DOHA,
October 17 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Qatari Foreign
Minister Hamad bin Jassem Al-Thani repudiated Wednesday, October
16, media reports that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein had threatened
to strike Qatar with missiles if it allows U.S. to use Al-Udeid base
in attacking Iraq.
In
an interview with Al-Jazeera Channel Wednesday, Hamad stressed that
nothing to that end was ever said during his meeting with Saddam in
Baghdad in August.
Leading
Egyptian newspaper, Al-Gumhooreya, reported late August, following a
visit by the Qatari Foreign Minister to Iraq – that the Iraqi
President had a row with Hamad and threatened him to launch missiles
against Qatar in case a fresh U.S.-led war on Iraq is launched from
the sprawling Al-Udeid base in Qatar.
Hamad
denied the Al-Gumhooreya report carried by Western media, but lashed
out at critics of his country over Al-Udeid base.
"There
are 120 aircraft in Al-Udied while the attack on Iraq requires some
1000 aircraft. From were would the other aircraft come?" Hamad
asked.
"Many
of those who criticize us had relations and military bases when their
interests required so. Now they are denying us what they have done
themselves," he added.
Asked
who was running things in the base, he said: "Of course when the
Americans are present in any place they do not allow any body else to
be in control. "
The
Qatari foreign minister admitted misunderstanding and tension in his
country's relations with Saudi Arabia, asserting that this would be
handled via "brotherly dialogue".
He
categorically denied that the differences were prompted by the two
countries' competition to woo the United States and that Qatar won the
U.S. over through giving U.S. troops free hand in Al-Udied airbase.
"The
Americans are present in almost all Gulf Cooperation Council
countries. There is no room for competition in this track," Hamad
said.
Hamad
also refuted reports that he had proposed to Saddam during the same
meeting the idea of ceding power in Iraq and going to exile in any
country of his own choice.
"This
does not comply with our policy that opposes any regime change forced
from outside," he said.
The
British newspaper, the Independent, reported Sunday, September 29,
that Saddam was furious when the Qatari minister raised the issue of
exile with him in their August meeting and "angrily asked him to
leave."
Hamad
expressed his conviction that Iraq's unconditional approval of the
return of U.N. arms inspectors came at a wrong timing.
"I
told the Iraqis it would be too late for them to accept the
inspectors' return now and that it would be better to wait until the
U.N. Security Council issues a resolution and then approve it because
it would undoubtedly request the return of inspectors," he added.
Taking
up the Palestinian cause, Hamad dismissed all Arab efforts as a waste
of time, asserting that at the end the U.S.-drawn scenario is the one
that will be enforced.
"We
have been defeated for a long time, even the Palestinian resistance we
want to extinguish," said Qatar's foreign minister.
He
also lambasted Arab ambassadors in Washington, saying that after the
9-11 attacks each of them tried to woo the Americans even at the
expense of fellow Arab countries.
Hamad
dubbed the Arab diplomats as "thieves" who were fighting to
please the United States, by smearing the image of each other.

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