BAGHDAD,
August 26 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Qatari Foreign Minister
Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem al-Thani flew into Baghdad Monday, August 26,
saying he hoped to prevent a new war over Iraq.
"We
are trying to save the region from new tragedies because whatever
happens in Iraq affects the whole region," Sheikh Hamad told
reporters on arrival.
"Qatar
is doing its best to calm the situation because the region cannot
tolerate any new jolts.
"We
are of course opposed to any military operation (against Iraq) and
have always said that (disarmament) must be settled through diplomacy
within the framework of the United Nations," he said.
The
minister expressed hope that talks with Iraqi officials would
"achieve a result that takes us away from a (U.S.) military
operation, Agence France-Presse (AFP) said.
"We
don't have a message to deliver to our brothers in Iraq. We have some
ideas which we'll share and we will listen to what they have to say in
the hope of reaching satisfactory results," he said.
Sheikh
Hamad stressed that Qatar was not acting as a mediator between the
United States and Iraq.
Iraqi
authorities must "cooperate, accept UN resolutions and consider
the question (of the return) of inspectors," he added.
Qatar
is bound by defense agreements with both the United States and
Britain, and is home to a huge U.S. air base at al-Udaid, 35
kilometres (20 miles) southwest of the capital.
However,
the tiny emirate was nonetheless the first Gulf state to reopen ties
with Iraq after the 1991 Gulf War.
And
during a June visit by Trade Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Faisal
al-Thani, Qatar became the third Gulf state to sign a free trade
agreement with Iraq after Oman and the United Arab Emirates, AFP said.
U.S.
press reports have suggested that the United States may use Qatar as
its principal base in any attack against Iraq, given the opposition to
military action from its key Gulf ally Saudi Arabia.
U.S.
newspapers have reported that the U.S. military is preparing to
transfer to the emirate equipment and some of the 6,000 U.S. troops
currently stationed in Saudi Arabia to bypass Saudi objections.
"America
has not asked us until now for new military facilities or mentioned a
military operation. It is only information propagated by certain
newspapers," Sheikh Hamad said.
Qatari
Military sources had told IslamOnline on Tuesday, August 13, 2002,
that there is huge expansion in the numbers of American warplanes and
soldiers in Qatar, indicating that this country may serve as launchpad
for a U.S. attack against Iraq.