Thierry Henry has committed his future to Arsenal and says he will stay at the club so long as Arsene Wenger remains in charge.
The 29-year-old, who has suffered an injury plagued season, has been linked on numerous occasions with a move away from the club despite signing a contract in the summer which will see him remain at the Emirates Stadium until 2010.
But the Frenchman insists he is going nowhere and pledged his full support behind Wenger who himself has been linked with a move away from Arsenal following David Dein's departure.
"At the end of last season I signed a new contract," Henry told Sport Magazine.
"I believe in the boss and what he is trying to do here. As long as he is here then I will be here - it's just as simple as that," he said.
Arsenal sit fourth in the Premiership behind Liverpool but are out of contention in all competitions this term.
Henry blames the lack of concentration and experience on such a poor season by Arsenal's standards as they look set to end the season trophy-less.
"I think perhaps we lose our concentration," said Henry. "We don't do this on purpose.
"We have ended up losing so many points against teams we should have beaten."
Reflecting on injury-plagued season, Henry added: "The talent is there but you need to put the ball in the back of the net, and I wasn't fresh enough, or there enough, to do that for the team this season.
"We have a lot of amazing youngsters at the club, but you need experience too," he added.
"We'd be in a much better position if we had taken our chances.
"We do have something to build on, but we need to kill teams off. That's all that let us down this year."