The Jerusalem Post

‘Qatar didn’t warn US, UK, France on Iran attack’

- • By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL

Qatar’s regime had advance knowledge of Iran’s attacks on four ships in the Gulf of Oman in May and failed to warn the US, France and the United Kingdom, according to a Western intelligen­ce report.

FoxNews.com first reported on Saturday about the eye-popping report and the implicatio­ns for internatio­nal security, since the vital waterway for trade connects the Strait of Hormuz to the Indian Ocean.

“Credible intelligen­ce reports indicate that the IRGC-Quds Forces Naval unit is responsibl­e for the Fujairah Port attacks, and the elements of civilian government of Iran, as well as the State of Qatar, were aware of the IRGC’s activities,” the report said.

The US sanctioned Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps as a foreign terrorist organizati­on.

A US Department of Defense spokesman told Fox News: “We do not discuss matters of intelligen­ce.”

The allegation that Qatar endangered US-allied ships appears to be in contrast to the open anti-terrorism cooperatio­n between the US and Qatar. Just last week the US Department of State hosted the third US-Qatar Counterter­rorism Dialogue led by top experts in the field from Qatar.

The US has a military base in the UAE and its largest military facility in the Middle East – the Al Udeid military base – is located in Qatar.

Lawmakers from the two European NATO powers pledged to demand answers from their respective government­s. The United Kingdom has armed forces stationed in the UAE and the French government has a naval air station in Abu Dhabi.

“I saw the reports and I am very concerned about them. I intend to raise questions with colleagues in other countries with strong connection­s in the Middle East such as Britain and with our government,” Nathalie Goulet, a member of the French Senate and a major figure in the European counterter­rorism community, told Fox News.

She submitted the intelligen­ce to the French security and defense establishm­ent for a formal investigat­ion.

The US government said Iran’s regime was behind the May 12 attack of two Saudi tankers, a Norwegian tanker and a UAE bunkering ship close to the port of Fujairah near the United Arab Emirates.

Ian Paisley Jr., a prominent British MP, told Fox News that “What we discussed is very alarming and requires serious and immediate investigat­ion by my own government.”

“I will be asking my government to immediatel­y investigat­e the claims made in this report,” he continued. “If proven to be correct, this poses serious questions for our alliances in this region. The Islamic threat must be taken seriously and I await the government’s response.”

Since 2017, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and a host of other countries in the region have barred Qatari airplanes and ships from using its airspace and sea passages.

Riyadh has blocked Qatar’s only land crossing, due to its alleged support of terrorists and Iran’s clerical regime. The US State Department designated Iran as the worst state-sponsor of terrorism.

In response to the FoxNews.com

article, Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on Saturday that it “had no advance knowledge of the attack on commercial vessels in the Gulf of Oman on May 12, 2019.”

The Saudi-led bloc against Qatar also accuses Doha of building an alliance with Tehran against the Sunni countries in the region.

The allegation that Qatar had prior knowledge of the Iranian attack in the vital waterway, which connects the Strait of Hormuz to the Indian Ocean, is of tremendous import for the national security of France and Britain, as well as of the United States.

The report could reasonably lead Western government to draw disturbing conclusion­s about Qatar jeopardizi­ng the security of a passageway vital to the flow of oil and thus to global security.

In 2014, German Developmen­t Minister Gerd Müller, a member of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s cabinet, accused Qatar of financing Islamic State terrorists.

“You have to ask who is arming, who is financing ISIS troops. The keyword there is Qatar and how do we deal with these people and states politicall­y?” Müller said.

 ?? (Satish Kumar/Reuters) ?? THE DAMAGED oil tanker ‘Andrea Victory’ is seen off the Port of Fujairah, UAE, in May.
(Satish Kumar/Reuters) THE DAMAGED oil tanker ‘Andrea Victory’ is seen off the Port of Fujairah, UAE, in May.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel