Pentagon will build a training facility for Qatari pilots in Idaho
[October 11, 2025]
By KONSTANTIN TOROPIN
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. military is moving forward with plans to
build a dedicated facility in Idaho to train pilots from Qatar, an
important U.S. ally in the Middle East, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth
announced Friday.
Hegseth, who made the announcement during a visit by Qatar's defense
minister, said the facility to be built at the Mountain Home Air Force
Base would “host a contingent of Qatari F-15s and pilots to enhance our
combined training, increase the lethality, interoperability.”
The arrangement is not unusual. Pentagon officials noted that similar
facilities have been set up for other allies for decades, and the Idaho
base already hosts a fighter squadron from Singapore.
But the news drew a sharp rebuke from close Trump ally and right-wing
influencer Laura Loomer, who called the plan “an abomination” and
accused the Qataris of being associated with Islamic terror
organizations.
“No foreign country should have a military base on US soil. Especially
Islamic countries,” Loomer wrote in one of several social media posts
just hours after Hegseth's announcement.
Although Loomer holds no formal position within the Trump
administration, her online complaints have a history of achieving
results. Her criticisms have led to the firing of officials on the
National Security Council, Dr. Vinay Prasad, the Food and Drug
Administration’s vaccine chief, and Gen. Tim Haugh, the head of the
National Security Agency.

Qatar, which hosts the biggest U.S. military base in the Middle East,
made clear that it will not have a base on U.S. soil and that it will
cover the costs of building the training facility.
“This will not be a Qatari air base,” the spokesman for the embassy in
Washington said in a statement posted on X. “Rather, Qatar has made an
initial 10-year commitment to construct and maintain a dedicated
facility within an existing US air base, intended for advanced training
and to enhance interoperability in defending and advancing our shared
interests around the world.”
The statement said the project will create hundreds of jobs for
Americans and noted that the planning began several years ago and it
received local approval.
When asked for more details about the future facility, Hegseth’s office
said it had nothing to offer beyond the secretary’s remarks.

The announcement comes just days after President Donald Trump signed an
executive order vowing to use all measures, including U.S. military
action, to defend Qatar.
Loomer also criticized that decision, writing, “I don’t want to die for
Qatar. Do you?” on social media. However, she was not alone.
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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, center, welcomes Qatar Minister of
Defense Sheikh Saoud Al Thani to the Pentagon, Friday, Oct. 10, 2025
in Washington. (AP Photo/Kevin Wolf)

The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board also questioned the pledge,
writing that “this is a decision that can be and should have been
debated.”
“Instead it comes out of the blue — an executive order following no
public debate,” the board wrote.
The small, gas-rich country played a key role in negotiating the most
recent ceasefire between Israel and Hamas aimed at ending the war in
Gaza, as well as in several other key negotiations. Doha, the capital of
Qatar, came under surprise attack from Israel last month as members of
Hamas were in the city last month to discuss a ceasefire.
Qatar also lavished a $400 million jumbo jet on Trump for use as Air
Force One.
However, the Qataris' connection with U.S. military aviation predates
these more recent developments.
In 2020, the U.S. Air Force announced it has signed a deal with Qatar
for the sale of more than 35 F-15 fighter jets.
An Air Force environmental study, completed two years later, revealed
that Mountain Home Air Force Base was proposing building a facility that
would house 12 Qatari F-15 jets and about 300 additional Qatari and U.S.
Air Force personnel.
While the U.S. military has a long history of training pilots for allied
countries, the practice received scrutiny in 2019 following a deadly
mass shooting at Pensacola Naval Air Station that killed three U.S.
service members and wounded several others.
The shooter, Mohammad Saeed Al-Shamrani, was a Saudi Air Force officer
who was training at the Pensacola base. The FBI said he was linked to
the al-Qaida extremist group and had been in contact with it before the
shooting.
In the wake of the shooting, the U.S. sent home 21 other Saudi military
students after an investigation revealed each had expressed jihadist or
anti-American sentiments on social media pages or had “contact with
child pornography,” including in internet chat rooms, according to
officials at the time. However, the U.S. continued to train Saudi
pilots.
Loomer referenced the incident in her social media posts on Friday. “Why
are we trying to train more Muslims how to fly planes on US soil? Didn’t
we already learn our lesson?” she wrote on social media.
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