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Gen. Charles Wald Qatar is helping Iran. Trump has the leverage to force a change — but will he?

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Gen. Charles Wald Qatar is helping Iran. Trump has the leverage to force a change — but will he?
In their White House meeting, the president should tell the emir he will lose the U.S. air base in his country if he doesn't cut ties with Tehran.
190708-think-al-udeid-air-base-se-214p_4ad5572a0f8770ff136f40879ed635a0.fit-760w.jpg

Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, center front, visits Al Udeid Air Base on Sept. 11, 2017.Qatar News Agency / via AP file

July 9, 2019, 7:21 AM GMT-4
By Gen. Charles Wald, former commander of U.S. Central Command Air Forces


Less than 48 hours after three commercial jets hit the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001, I helped the U.S. Air Force open the Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar as the general in charge of all U.S. Air Force personnel in the Middle East. It was a strategically advantageous site on the Persian Gulf that allowed our planes to get into position for operations in Afghanistan, a crucial mission in defense of our country.

That conflict isn’t over, and the United States’ need for strategic posts in the Middle East is as great as ever, particularly as tensions with Iran mount and the Pentagon dispatches 1,000 more troops to the region. Though that number is down considerably from the 120,000 floated in May, it underscores how seriously the U.S. needs to be able to address threats in the region, particularly those from Iran.

It is time to use the full force of the Oval Office to explain the dire consequences that Qatar could face for continuing its game of cozying up to countries on all sides of the Middle East’s volatile divides.

Yet, it is the very danger posed by Iran that leads me to call for the Al Udeid Air Base to be closed if Qatar doesn’t change its behavior. It has shown support for Iran, which has been the world’s foremost abetter of state-sponsored terrorism and ill-will in the Middle East and the very one we are prepping to combat. In this current climate, where Iran is accused of attacking foreign oil tankers and U.S. drones and has announced it’s accelerating work on its nuclear program, Qatar must choose: It can keep its U.S. air base or its ties to Tehran.


President Donald Trump has the ideal opportunity to convincingly deliver this message when he hosts Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani on Tuesday. It is time to use the full force of the Oval Office to explain the dire consequences that Qatar could face for continuing its game of cozying up to countries on all sides of the Middle East’s volatile divides; it is time to decide which team it’s on.

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President Donald Trump meets Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani in the Oval Office at the White House on April 10, 2018.Kevin Lamarque / Reuters file
I say this as someone who has dedicated his career to serving our armed forces and who believes strongly that the U.S. must maintain a military presence in hot spots throughout the world, build alliances as a bulwark against terrorism, and serve as a global player to stand for good. Including, certainly, in the Gulf.

We should build those alliances, though, only with partners that share our goals and objectives. We must now take the time to reconsider whether Qatar is such a strategic partner.


In addition to its troubling involvement with Iran, Qatar is a nation that has been accused of supporting Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who was the principal architect behind the Sept. 11 attacks. It is a nation that has funded Muslim Brotherhood affiliates, Hamas, ISIS, Al-Nusra Front (Al-Qaeda in Syria) and the Taliban. Israeli diplomats refer to it as the “Club Med” of the Islamic terror world — a posh breeding ground for terrorism.

In June 2017, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt all cut formal relations with Qatar because they recognized that their Gulf neighbor must make the choice that I am urging the U.S. to make as well. We should be as clear-eyed in our approach to the region.




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Until now, U.S. strategy in the Middle East has been uneven and fractionalized. It is time to set priorities and stay the course on those objectives, particularly deterring Iran and its proxies, and contributing to the defense of our regional allies, first and foremost Israel, as well as like-minded nations such as Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Kuwait, Jordan and Egypt.

The United States has leverage when it comes to Qatar and the Al Udeid Air Base. Our Air Force has used that base for more than 17 years now. Qatar wants the base to remain, and has offered many inducements for it to stay.

As important as the base clearly is to Qatar, the kingdom doesn’t seem to realize that it’s not critical to America.

As important as the base clearly is to Qatar, the kingdom doesn’t seem to realize that it’s not critical to America. Our military could easily expand to other regional partners such as Saudi Arabia, the UAE or even Jordan. Moving our forces currently based in Qatar is not nearly as difficult as one might think, and can be done relatively quickly and painlessly. We are not, and never will be, dependent on a single base.

Trump must tell the emir: The U.S. will stay and continue to invest in the Al Udeid Air Base if — and only if — you rejoin the Gulf Cooperation Council and cut your ties with Iran. The choice is yours.

Gen. Charles Wald
General Charles Wald (Ret.) is a four-star general in the U.S. Air Force and former deputy commander of U.S. European Command. He is the president of Jones Group Middle East, responsible for overseeing business development and operations in the region, and a distinguished fellow at the Jewish Institute for National Security of America.


https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opini...has-leverage-force-change-will-he-ncna1027621
 
Helping the failed Iranian Mullah regime how exactly?

Qatar is one big US military base and the headquarter of CENTCOM. Everything that Qatar does is "approved" by the US. Qatar has pursued their own foreign policy that has little to do with Iran if anything. It might collide in some countries by coincidence. Nonsense article as the US could remove the current emir within hours if they wanted and occupy all of Qatar within hours likewise.

The US is content with status quo.
 
Helping the failed Iranian Mullah regime how exactly?

Qatar is one big US military base and the headquarter of CENTCOM. Everything that Qatar does is "approved" by the US. Qatar has pursued their own foreign policy that has little to do with Iran if anything. It might collide in some countries by coincidence. Nonsense article as the US could remove the current emir within hours if they wanted and occupy all of Qatar within hours likewise.

The US is content with status quo.
Dont know, just watching the Author. He must have some Information.

Gen. Charles Wald
General Charles Wald (Ret.) is a four-star general in the U.S. Air Force and former deputy commander of U.S. European Command.
 
Dont know, just watching the Author. He must have some Information.

Gen. Charles Wald
General Charles Wald (Ret.) is a four-star general in the U.S. Air Force and former deputy commander of U.S. European Command.

I don't dispute that but I dispute Qatar being able to act independently foreign policy wise in relation to Iran - the supposed "enemy" of the US. Makes little sense given the reality of Qatar (largest US military base in the region, CENTCOM headquarters etc.).

So the only conclusion is that the US is fine with "status quo" which the ground reality also confirms.
 
I don't dispute that but I dispute Qatar being able to act independently foreign policy wise in relation to Iran - the supposed "enemy" of the US. Makes little sense given the reality of Qatar (largest US military base in the region, CENTCOM headquarters etc.).

So the only conclusion is that the US is fine with "status quo" which the ground reality also confirms.
Agree with your reasoning, and Qatar's heavy Defence related dependency on US, how they could Play like this, unless CIA / USA knows what they are doing.
 
Agree with your reasoning, and Qatar's heavy Defence related dependency on US, how they could Play like this, unless CIA / USA knows what they are doing.

Don't forget that the Iranian wannabe Arab Mullah's were installed directly after having boarded a plan from France.

Don't forget that the real Iranian opposition to the Shah was made up by pro-USSR communists (largest group) that the Iranian Mullah's conveniently got rid of in the middle of the Cold War.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tudeh_Party_of_Iran

Iran's Shah was controlled completely by the West and Western spies were everywhere. You don't think that they knew what was going on in freaking France or in Iraq (their ally back then) where Khomeini was first exiled to before going to France?




Even the biggest anti-Western leader in the MENA region in recent years (Saddam Hussein) was initially a CIA agent.


Saddam could have killed Khomeini but was told by the US that he could be useful if the Shah (then an enemy of Saddam) would cross the line and work against US interests in the region.

Go take a look where all the Mullah politicians children and families live. Most of them live in the West, lol. Even their beloved foreign minister who keeps touring the West and US.:lol:


Not only that many leading "politicians" of the Mullah regime (those that came to power initially) were all "made in the West" as they often had studied in the US. The most famous Iranian women regime follower even lived in the US with her family for years. The spokeswomen during the US embassy hostage taking. To this day part of the Iranian regime.


See this video 4:52 minutes into this video:


 
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