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Qatar has set Israeli sphincters twitching as they follow in Saudi footsteps in seeking F-35 jets from the US - and they only have themselves to blame. Right, so this is being sold as an argument about jets, as if Israel has suddenly developed a principled interest in the airspace of a country it doesn’t border, isn’t at war with, and routinely relies on to clean up its diplomatic messes. But nobody is actually confused about what’s happening here. Israel isn’t panicking because Qatar wants aircraft. Israel is panicking because Qatar got hit. Qatar hosts the largest American base in the region, plays mediator when Washington needs someone to talk to people it pretends not to talk to, and has spent years doing exactly what the system rewards: stay useful, stay quiet, stay embedded. Then missiles land on its territory anyway, because wars don’t stay contained anymore and guarantees don’t mean what they used to. And now Qatar is doing the unforgivable thing. It’s responding rationally. Not by escalating, not by picking sides, but by asking how much exposure it’s expected to absorb for everyone else’s freedom of action. That question is what’s rattling Israel. Not the jets. Right, so Israel is lobbying Washington hard over Qatar’s renewed interest in advanced aircraft, invoking its so-called qualitative military edge, briefing journalists about risk and instability, and trying to slow or block a decision that, on the face of it, shouldn’t trouble it at all. Qatar isn’t an enemy state. Qatar doesn’t border Israel. Qatar isn’t threatening Israeli airspace. And yet Israel is acting as if something fundamental has slipped. Because it has. Qatar sits at the centre of the American military footprint in the Middle East. Al-Udeid Air Base hosts US Central Command’s forward headquarters, thousands of personnel, and the infrastructure that underpins American air operations across the region.
By Damien WilleyQatar has set Israeli sphincters twitching as they follow in Saudi footsteps in seeking F-35 jets from the US - and they only have themselves to blame. Right, so this is being sold as an argument about jets, as if Israel has suddenly developed a principled interest in the airspace of a country it doesn’t border, isn’t at war with, and routinely relies on to clean up its diplomatic messes. But nobody is actually confused about what’s happening here. Israel isn’t panicking because Qatar wants aircraft. Israel is panicking because Qatar got hit. Qatar hosts the largest American base in the region, plays mediator when Washington needs someone to talk to people it pretends not to talk to, and has spent years doing exactly what the system rewards: stay useful, stay quiet, stay embedded. Then missiles land on its territory anyway, because wars don’t stay contained anymore and guarantees don’t mean what they used to. And now Qatar is doing the unforgivable thing. It’s responding rationally. Not by escalating, not by picking sides, but by asking how much exposure it’s expected to absorb for everyone else’s freedom of action. That question is what’s rattling Israel. Not the jets. Right, so Israel is lobbying Washington hard over Qatar’s renewed interest in advanced aircraft, invoking its so-called qualitative military edge, briefing journalists about risk and instability, and trying to slow or block a decision that, on the face of it, shouldn’t trouble it at all. Qatar isn’t an enemy state. Qatar doesn’t border Israel. Qatar isn’t threatening Israeli airspace. And yet Israel is acting as if something fundamental has slipped. Because it has. Qatar sits at the centre of the American military footprint in the Middle East. Al-Udeid Air Base hosts US Central Command’s forward headquarters, thousands of personnel, and the infrastructure that underpins American air operations across the region.