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US to sell 36 F-15 fighters worth $12 billion to Qatar

The US move comes amid tensions over President Donald Trump's backing for a Saudi Arabia -led coalition's move to isolate Qatar for supporting terrorism.

India TV News Desk India TV News Desk New Delhi Published on: June 15, 2017 11:26 IST
F-15 fighter jet
US to ink deal with Qatar for sell of 36 F-15 fighter jets

The United States has agreed to ink a deal with Qatar to sell $12 billion worth of 36 American F-15 Fighters, Bloomberg reported.

The US move comes amid tensions over President Donald Trump's backing for a Saudi Arabia -led coalition's move to isolate Qatar for supporting terrorism.

“Secretary of Defence Jim Mattis met today (Wednesday) with Qatari Minister of State for Defence Affairs Khalid al-Attiyah to discuss concluding steps in finalising the Foreign Military Sales purchase of US-manufactured F-15 fighter aircraft by the State of Qatar,” Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. Roger Cabiness told CNN. 

“The $12 billion sale will give Qatar a state of the art capability and increase security cooperation and interoperability between the US and Qatar.” 

“The secretary and the minister also discussed mutual security interests, including the current status of operations against IS (Islamic State), and the importance of de-escalating tensions so all partners in the Gulf region can focus on next steps in meeting common goals,” Cabiness added.

The Qatari defence ministry issued a statement Wednesday hailing the F-15 deal.

“This agreement underscores the longstanding commitment of the State of Qatar in jointly working with our friends and allies in the US,” CNN quoted al-Attiyah as saying in the statement.

He also praised the US-Qatar relationship, saying the two countries had “solidified their military cooperation by having fought together side by side for many years now in an effort to eradicate terrorism.”

The announcement comes after a week three Gulf countries—Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates—along with Egypt moved to cut off diplomatic ties with Qatar, host to the one of the Pentagon’s largest military bases in the Middle East, after claiming that Doha funds terrorist groups.

More Arab and Muslim-majority African countries later joined the diplomatic blockade, even as several powers have called for resolving the crisis.

US officials Secretary of State Rex Tillerson have called for the crisis to be de-escalated and on Wednesday while appearing before the House foreign affairs committee, reports CNN.

Speaking to the House armed services committee Monday, Mattis called the diplomatic situation “very complex”, acknowledging the large US military presence and close US-Qatar military relationship.

(With IANS inputs)

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