Qatar Accuses Saudis Of Reckless Behaviour After Military Threat Report

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Foreign Minister said that they are seeking formal confirmation from the French government
(File)DUBAI:  Qatar accused its giant neighbour Saudi Arabia of reckless behaviour after a newspaper report that
Riyadh had threatened military action if Doha installed a Russian air defence system.Qatar's foreign minister told Al Jazeera he did not
think the Saudi threat - reportedly made in a letter to France - was serious
But he accused Riyadh of using the letter to try and create a "disturbance" in a region already rocked by a year-long stand-off between Doha
and other powers.France's Le Monde newspaper reported on Saturday that Saudi King Salman had sent a letter to French President Emmanuel
Macron expressing concern over talks between Doha and Moscow about Russian S-400 missile air defence systems.The newspaper added that the
king had said Saudi Arabia was ready to consider all measures, including military action."We are seeking formal confirmation from the French
government (about the letter)," Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani told the English-language channel of Qatar-based
Al Jazeera in an interview aired on Tuesday."There is no serious military threat out of this, but the way it is being used to justify or to
create a disturbance in the region is just unacceptable," he said
"There is no legitimate grievance behind this letter and threatening Qatar."Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates
severed diplomatic and economic ties with Qatar a year ago, accusing Doha of supporting terrorism
Qatar denies the accusation and says the boycott is an attempt to impinge on its sovereignty.The French president's office and the Saudi
government's communications office have not responded to requests for comment on the newspaper report.Qatar and Russia signed an agreement
on military and technical cooperation last year
Qatar's ambassador to Russia was quoted as saying in January that it was in talks to buy the Russian S-400 missile air defence systems.Asked
if Doha would go ahead with the deal, the foreign minister said: "Qatar made all the options open for its defence procurement, so we are
seeking the best quality to defend our country and we have all the options open for this."Sheikh Mohammed described the Saudi move as
"reckless behaviour".Washington has strong alliances with both sides and fears the split among Sunni Muslim U.S
allies could benefit Shi'ite Muslim Iran.Qatar hosts Al Udeid Air Base, which is home to more than 11,000 U.S
and coalition forces.© Thomson Reuters 2018(This story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is auto-generated from a
syndicated feed.)