The United States is pulling some of its anti-aircraft and missile batteries out of the Middle East, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday, citing US senior military staffers.
The removal will reportedly be conducted next month, according to the Wall Street Journal.
As many as four Patriot missile systems will be withdrawn from Jordan, Kuwait and Bahrain, the edition stated, adding that the step essentially marks a shift of attention away from long-lasting military confrontation in the Middle East and Afghanistan, towards soured relations with China and Russia, and subsequently meet nascent threats from there.
The media outlet noted that there were no plans to replace the Patriot systems in the Middle Eastern countries, which is seen as a significant decrease in the defense capability in the region since the batteries were used not only to protect the US bases in the region, but to provide defense for Washington allies.
It is not immediately clear what the exact number of US troops in the Middle East is, but according to recent Pentagon data, the country has roughly 54,000 troops in more than a dozen of Middle Eastern countries and is maintaining military bases in seven of them. The general list includes Egypt, Israel, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Jordan, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Oman, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Bahrain.
According to the Pentagon’s quarterly reports on US military presence around the world, published in November 2017, the number of US soldiers and civilians working for the Department of Defense in the Middle East is 54,180, up from 40,517 during the first two quarters of 2017.
Qatar notably hosts the largest US base in the Middle East — Al Udeid Air Base, which lies about 32 kilometers Southwest of Doha. An estimated 10,000 US military troops are deployed in the area.
FARS