The Asian Age

Bahrain orders Qatar troops to leave in 48 hrs

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Doha, June 18: Bahrain has ordered Qatari troops serving with a coalition fighting the Islamic State group to leave its territory, a source with knowledge of the situation said on Sunday.

The soldiers, part of the US Naval Forces Central Command, which is headquarte­red in Bahrain, had been asked to leave the coalition and may depart within the next 48 hours, the source said. “The Bahrainis told the US general in command of the base that Qatari soldiers must leave,” the source said on condition of anonymity.

“They are still in the base but likely to leave within the next two days.” The news comes as the Gulf faces the biggest diplomatic crisis in recent years, with regional powerhouse Saudi Arabia and some of its allies suspending ties with gas-rich Qatar over accusation­s the emirate bankrolled Islamist extremists and had ties to rival Iran.

Qatar has, however, denies the charges.

Direct tensions between Manama and Doha have been further exacerbate­d after Bahrain accused Qatar of directly interferin­g in its internal affairs.

Qatar has also denied those charges. The source did not detail the number of Qatari troops based in Bahrain. One analyst estimated it was no more than a “handful of officers”.

Qatar has deployed troops with Navcent since 2014, according to one official. Navcent is part of the US Central Command whose area of operation includes the Middle East and Asia. As part of their operations, numerous air strikes against IS targets in Iraq, Syria and Afghanista­n have been conducted from Qatar’s Al-Udeid, the largest United States base in the region.

Washington is involved in diplomatic efforts to resolve the impasse in the region but US policy has proved unpredicta­ble.

President Donald Trump has sided with Saudi Arabia and its allies, including Bahrain, the UAE and Egypt, claiming Doha had “historical­ly been a funder of terrorism at a very high level”.

However, Pentagon and state department officials have scrambled to reassure the emirate.

The US last week agreed to a $12 billion sale of F-15 fighters to Qatar.

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