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US Military Jets No Longer Visible At Qatar Base, Show Satellite Images

Nearly 40 military aircraft -- including transport planes like the Hercules C-130 and reconnaissance aircraft -- were parked on the tarmac on June 5. In an image taken on June 19, only three aircraft are visible.

US Military Jets No Longer Visible At Qatar Base, Show Satellite Images
Only 3 US aircraft are visible at its Qatar air base, according to images published by Planet Labs PBC.
  • Dozens of US military aircraft have disappeared from Al Udeid base in Qatar
  • Nearly 40 aircraft were visible on June 5, only three remained by June 19
  • US embassy in Qatar limited base access due to regional hostilities and urged vigilance
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Washington:

Dozens of US military aircraft are no longer on the tarmac at a major US base in Qatar, satellite images show -- a possible move to shield them from eventual Iranian air strikes, as Washington weighs whether to intervene in Tehran's conflict with Israel.

Between June 5 and 19, nearly all of the aircraft visible at the Al Udeid base are no longer anywhere in plain sight, according to images published by Planet Labs PBC and analyzed by AFP.

Nearly 40 military aircraft -- including transport planes like the Hercules C-130 and reconnaissance aircraft -- were parked on the tarmac on June 5. In an image taken on June 19, only three aircraft are visible.

The US embassy in Qatar announced Thursday that access to the base would be limited "out of an abundance of caution and in light of ongoing regional hostilities," and urged personnel to "exercise increased vigilance."

The White House says US President Donald Trump will decide sometime in the next two weeks whether to join ally Israel's strikes on Iran. The Islamic republic could then respond by striking US bases in the region.

Mark Schwartz, a former lieutenant general in the US Army and a defense researcher at the Rand Corporation, said the personnel, aircraft and installations at Al Udeid would be "extremely vulnerable" given its "close proximity" to Iran.

Schwartz, who served in the Middle East, told AFP that even shrapnel could render the aircraft "non-mission capable."

"You want to reduce risk to US forces, both personnel and equipment," he said.

The planes that have left the tarmac since early June could have been moved to hangars or to other bases in the region. 

The US military did not immediately respond to an AFP request for comment.

US forces in the Middle East have been mobilized since Israel's first strikes on Iran nearly a week ago, with an additional aircraft carrier en route and significant aircraft movement.

An AFP analysis of open source data tracking aircraft positioning showed that at least 27 military refueling planes -- KC-46A Pegasus and KC-135 Stratotanker planes -- traveled from the United States to Europe from June 15-18.

Twenty-five of them were still in Europe as of late Wednesday, with only two returning to American soil, the data showed.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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