CEO of the Qatar 2022 Bid Committee Hassan Al-Thawadi (R)  presents new official ambassador Zinedine Zidane with a personalised  shirt in Doha September 16, 2010.  [Photo/Agencies]
Qatar's bid is one of nine for the finals  but their main opposition is likely to come from Australia, Japan, South  Korea and United States.
"Football is for everyone," Zidane said in a  statement. "When I think of all the youth of the Middle East, what  they're missing is an event like the World Cup.
"We had [the 2010 World Cup] in Africa and  now it is time for the Middle East."
It is almost certain one of the four  European bids from England, Russia, Spain/Portugal and  Belgium/Netherlands will win the right to stage the 2018 World Cup,  meaning a country from outside Europe will stage the 2022 finals.
Qatar would be the smallest host country  since Uruguay held the inaugural tournament in 1930.
The head of a FIFA inspection team hinted on  Thursday the Gulf Arab state's size, rather than its fierce summer heat  or the fact it is an Islamic country, could rule it out of contention  though.
FIFA will announce the venues for 2018 and  2022 in Zurich on Dec. 2.

 
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