Additional US fighter planes sent to Gulf amid Iran tensions

Nearly a dozen Air Force F-22 stealth fighters have deployed
to the Persian Gulf state of Qatar, part of a force buildup requested by U.S.
Central Command in May in response to what it called heightened Iranian threats
against American forces in the region.
The Air Force arm of U.S. Central Command on Friday said the
F-22 Raptors arrived this week at al-Udeid air base to “defend American forces
and interests.” It posted to its website photos of several F-22s arriving there
on Thursday and said this is the first time F-22s have deployed to al-Udeid,
which is a hub for U.S. air operations in the Middle East.
F-22s, which carry air-to-air missiles and can perform
ground-attack missions as well, had previously deployed to al-Dhafra air base
in the United Arab Emirates, where they were used last year in support of U.S.
and partner forces in Syria.
Four B-52 strategic bombers were deployed to al-Udeid days
after a May 5 White House announcement that the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft
carrier strike group also was being rushed to the region in response to
“troubling and escalatory indications and warnings” and as a “message to the
Iranian regime that any attack on United States interests or on those of our
allies will be met with unrelenting force.”
At the request of Gen. Frank McKenzie, commander of Central
Command, additional Patriot air-and-missile defense systems also were sent to
the Gulf region in recent weeks. He also is receiving additional surveillance
and intelligence-gathering aircraft to improve the military’s ability to
monitor potential Iranian threats against shipping in the Gulf area.