From Military.com:
“US Troops Returning to Saudi
Arabia Amid Threats from Iran”
With Iranian military threats in
mind, the United States is sending American forces, including fighter aircraft,
air defense missiles and likely more than 500 troops, to a Saudi air base that
became a hub of American air power in the Middle East in the 1990s but was
abandoned by Washington after it toppled Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein in
2003. The Saudi Foreign Ministry announced the basing agreement Friday without
mentioning details. Senior American defense officials said some U.S. troops and
Patriot air defense missile systems have already arrived at Prince Sultan Air
Base, south of Riyadh, where the troops have been preparing for the arrival of
aircraft later this summer as well as additional troops. The officials spoke on
condition of anonymity in order to provide details not publicly announced. The
agreement has been in the works for many weeks and is not a response
specifically to Friday's seizure by Iran of a British tanker in the Persian
Gulf. Tensions with Iran have spiked since May when the Trump administration
said it had detected increased Iranian preparations for possible attacks on
U.S. forces and interests in the Gulf area. In a written statement Friday
evening, U.S. Central Command said the deployments to Saudi Arabia had been
approved by the Pentagon. "This movement of forces provides an additional
deterrent, and ensures our ability to defend our forces and interests in the
region from emergent, credible threats," Central Command said. "This
movement creates improvement of operational depth and logistical networks. U.S.
Central Command continually assesses force posture in the region and is working
with Kingdom of Saudi Arabia authorities to base U.S. assets at the appropriate
locations." Putting U.S. combat forces back in Saudi Arabia, after an
absence of more than a decade, adds depth to the regional alignment of U.S.
military power, which is mostly in locations on the Persian Gulf that are more
vulnerable to Iranian missile attack. But it also introduces a political and
diplomatic complication for the Trump administration, accused by critics of
coddling the Saudis even after the murder last fall of dissident writer Jamal
Khashoggi by Saudi agents. Many in Congress now question the decades-old
U.S.-Saudi security alliance and oppose major new arms sales to the kingdom. Starting
with the January 1991 air war against Iraq after its invasion of Kuwait the
previous summer, the U.S. flew a wide range of aircraft from Prince Sultan air
base, originally known as al-Kharj. Supported by an all-American array of
creature comforts like fast-food restaurants and swimming pools, U.S. forces
there flew and maintained Air Force fighters and other warplanes. The base also
served as a launch pad for the December 1998 bombing of Iraq, code-named
Operation Desert Fox, which targeted sites believed to be associated with
Iraq's nuclear and missile programs. In 2001, the base became home to the U.S.
military's main air control organization, known as the Combined Air Operations
Center, which orchestrated the air war in Afghanistan until it was relocated in
2003 to al-Udeid air base in Qatar.
^ With what Iran is doing in Iraq
and in the Persian Gulf it makes sense to position more US troops (and other allied
troops) in the region. ^
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