Qatar, US nearing defence deal after Israel’s attack in Doha

Qatar, US nearing defence deal after Israel’s attack in Doha

Marco Rubio, citing strong US-Qatar relations, also urged Doha to maintain its mediator role in securing an Israel–Hamas truce.

US secretary of state Marco Rubio gestures at Ben Gurion International Airport as he departs Tel Aviv for Qatar. (AP pic)
TEL AVIV:
Qatar and the US are on the verge of finalising an enhanced defence cooperation agreement, top US diplomat Marco Rubio said on Tuesday, after Israel’s attack on Hamas political leaders in Qatar last week drew widespread condemnation.

The attack in Doha was especially sensitive, as Qatar is a close US ally and home to the biggest US military base in the Middle East. Qatar has been hosting and mediating ceasefire talks – alongside Egypt – since the Gaza war started nearly two years ago.

Rubio, who was on his way to Doha from Tel Aviv, called for Qatar to continue its role as a mediator between Israel and Hamas to reach a ceasefire in the Gaza war, saying there was “a very short window of time in which a deal could happen”.

“If any country in the world can help mediate it, Qatar is the one. They’re the ones that can do it,” Rubio said while departing Tel Aviv for Doha.

“We have a close partnership with the Qataris. In fact, we have an enhanced defence cooperation agreement, which we’ve been working on, we’re on the verge of finalising,” Rubio said, without elaborating.

Qatar called the Israeli attack “cowardly and treacherous” but said it wouldn’t deter it from its role as a mediator, alongside Egypt and the US.

During a visit in May, Trump had assured gas-rich Qatar that Washington would protect it if it ever came under attack. He said he was not informed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in advance about Israel’s attack.

Netanyahu threatened to attack Hamas leaders “wherever they are” during a press conference with Rubio on Monday, as the heads of Arab and Islamic states held a summit to back Qatar after Israel’s attack last week in the Gulf state.

Trump said he was unhappy with Israel’s strike, which he described as a unilateral action that did not advance US or Israeli interests.

He sought to assure the Qataris that such attacks would not happen again during a meeting with the Qatari prime minister in New York on Friday.

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