The US Central Command at the Qatari Air Base conducted the first successful operation of its air operations from the Shaw base in South Carolina, USA, in anticipation of any possible scenarios, and confirmed that it is not moving to another location outside Qatar.

Officials at the Joint Air Operations Center in al-Udeid, which includes leaders from about 20 countries, said the move would confirm the readiness of the US Air Force and the coalition for any operations or scenarios at any time and from any geographical location.

Officials said the move would also improve the base of many, and raise the technical competence to keep abreast of technical developments, where the control of the flight and control of more than 300 military aircraft in the first day.

"The Joint Air Command Center seeks to build on the latest state-of-the-art technology in the field of data transfer and transformation to improve the performance of air operations management and control operations at the base of many," said Chance Salzman, deputy commander of US Air Force Central Command.

"Qatar has been and remains an exceptional partner, and this base from which we operate is a great base, and Central Central Command has no intention of moving anywhere," Salzman said.

The US general said that his country will not allow al-Qaeda to become a weak point in the military language, and is seeking to distribute tasks to more than one site so as not to turn its strength into a weak point, and thus easier to overcome.

Regarding the drone attack on Saudi Aramco's oil facilities, Salzman said he wished that everything in the region could be monitored and warnings issued before any threat. It cannot be monitored.

"We are doing everything we can to protect the most sensitive sites, but that does not mean that our radars are monitoring everything. Unfortunately, this is what happened at Aramco, so we are now redistributing some of the tasks so we can provide more protection."