US quietly reaches agreement with Qatar to keep operating largest military base in Middle East
In this handout photo from the US Air Force, an airman guides an F-16 Fighting Falcon during training at Al-Udeid Air Base, Qatar, January 24, 2022.
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The
United States has quietly reached an agreement that
extends its military presence at a sprawling base in Qatar for
another 10 years, three US defense officials and another official familiar
with the agreement told CNN.
The deal, which has not been announced publicly,
highlights Washington’s reliance on the tiny Gulf country that has recently
played a central role in mediating the release of Americans from captivity in
Gaza and Venezuela.
The Al Udeid Air Base, located in the desert southwest of Doha, is
the biggest US military installation in the Middle East and can house more
than 10,000 American troops.
Secretary
of Defense Lloyd Austin visited Al Udeid last month where
he thanked Qatar for their increased spending
on the base.
But he made no mention of the renewal and the Biden
administration has not publicized it – at a time when Qatar has come under
growing scrutiny for hosting senior Hamas leaders. Qatari officials have countered that it was only after a US
request during the Obama administration that Hamas was allowed to open a
political office in Doha.
The base has been a pivotal hub for the US Central Command’s
air operations in or around Afghanistan, Iran and across the Middle East. The
Qatari and British Air Forces also operate from the base.
The extension comes as the US has bolstered its presence in the
region amid escalating threats from Iran-backed militant groups in Iraq, Syria
and Yemen.
After Hamas kidnapped some 240 hostages from Israel on October 7,
Qatar has been the primary go-between with Hamas to broker the initial release
of scores of the Israeli and international hostages. It continues to be central
in the talks to try to revive hostage negotiations, coordinating with the CIA
and Israel’s Mossad, as well as Egypt.
Their part in the months of negotiations over Americans detained
by Venezuela was less public but came to light after President Nicolas
Maduro released 10 Americans last month in exchange for a close ally accused by
the US of laundering hundreds of millions of dollars.
Qatar’s involvement in both sets of negotiations has
been seen as an extension of the mediating role the country has
taken on with other US enemies, including Iran and the
Taliban. Its vast oil and natural gas wealth, coupled with ability to
act as a facilitator, allow Qatar to punch above its weight, analysts say.
While
their hosting of Hamas leadership was no secret, the brutality of the October
7 massacre in Israel has ignited criticism of Qatar and calls for them to
expel Hamas.
President Joe Biden has spoken about his conversations with
Qatar’s emir but at times hasn’t given them the credit they feel they
deserve. Biden did not mention Qatar in a November op-ed in The Washington Post, while Egypt
and other Middle East allies were referenced. Nor did Biden highlight Qatar’s
part in the release of the detainees in Venezuela in his official statement.
Thousands of Afghans were flown from Kabul to Al Udeid during the
chaotic American withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021. US military personnel struggled to provide for the massive
influx of refugees from what Biden called “one of the largest, most
difficult airlifts in history.”
Qatar has committed billions of its own funds
upgrade the facilities for US Airmen at the base. Al Udeid became CENTCOM’s
main air base in 2003, shifting forces and assets from the Prince
Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, where the presence of a large number of
American military personnel was more sensitive and controversial.
While Austin didn’t announce the extension of the Al Udeid
agreement during his visit at the base last month, he did say that the US and
Qatar “will formally take steps forward to expand and reinforce our bilateral
defense relationship.”
“We’ll do this through Qatar’s commitment to contribute
significant resources to increase capabilities here at Al Udeid Air Base, and
that will support both of our forces for years to come,” Austin added.

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