Qatar Condemns Iran Missile Strike, Arab Leaders Avoid Backing Tehran
- Arab countries condemned the Iranian missile attacks that targeted the US Al Udeid base in Qatar, with Kuwait, Oman, the UAE, and Yemen joining Qatar in the condemnation.
- Qatar's Defense Ministry reported that its air defenses intercepted the missiles, stating there were no casualties.
- Saudi Arabia denounced Iran's aggression against Qatar as a violation of international law.
- Egypt and Jordan similarly denounced the attack, viewing it as a breach of sovereignty and international law.
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Qatar has good relations with Iran and the US. Tehran's retaliation has been warned. Doha could help find a way out of the spiral of violence.
Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani said on Tuesday that Iran's missile strikes on US bases in Qatar were an "unacceptable" attack on the country. AFP reports. "The attack on the State of Qatar is an unacceptable act, especially since the State of Qatar has made great diplomatic efforts to de-escalate the situation," the prime minister told reporters. He also made it clear that Qatar's response to Iran's actions would be "dip…
Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri wrote, through his account on the XX platform: "All solidarity with Qatar, its people, and its prince in the face of an unacceptable and condemnable attack." God saved our Arab countries, our brothers and our brothers all in it.
Several Arab countries in the Middle East, especially those in the Persian Gulf, condemned Iran's launch of missiles this Monday against the U.S. air base of Al Udeid, outside the capital of Qatar, Doha, an act of reprisal that was described as "unacceptable" and that "cannot be justified under any circumstances."In a statement, Saudi Arabia's Foreign Ministry called "aggression" "unacceptable" and stated that it constitutes "a flagrant violatio…
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