Foreign Correspondent: U.S. Beats War Drums in Middle East
"'Repeated violations': Iraqi president condemns US air strikes "Top Democrat blasts Trump's 'false' justification for Soleimani killing "As Tensions With Iran Escalated, Trump Opted for Most Extreme Measure "The Latest: Iraq parliament votes to expel US military""""
This article looks a pretty good summary of the latest events and the present situation in the ongoing Trump war against Iran.
Leaders in Washington and Tehran say they don’t want a full-scale war, but they are playing a dangerous game.
The Pentagon sent two aircraft carriers to the region, claiming in a March 19 Navy statement .. https://www.navy.mil/submit/display.asp?story_id=112393 .. that the United States is protecting “freedom of navigation and [the] free flow of commerce.” Threatening a possible military attack on Iran, the Navy said the carriers “provide the combatant commander significant striking power for contingency operations.”
Leaders in Washington and Tehran say they don’t want a full-scale war, but they are playing a dangerous game. And the people of Iraq will suffer the consequences.
“Iraq has become a proxy war between the United States and Iran,” says Raed Jarrar, an Iraqi-born human rights activist and writer based in Washington, D.C., in a phone interview. “Iraq is paying in blood and treasure.”
In 2018, U.S. President Donald Trump unilaterally pulled out .. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/08/world/middleeast/trump-iran-nuclear-deal.html .. of the nuclear accord with Iran and imposed harsh sanctions on Tehran. Iran waited a year to see if the European signatories to the accord—Britain, France, and Germany—would live up to the agreement by engaging in normal trade and investment. The Europeans knuckled under to Trump, so Iran decided to slam down its fist.
At the end of 2019, Iran-allied militias launched rocket and mortar attacks on U.S. bases in Iraq. Washington portrays these militias as tools of Iran. Groups such as Kataib Hezbollah do receive arms and training from Iran, but they are also now part of the Iraqi army.
The United States picks its favorites within the Iraqi military as well, arming and training Kurdish militias and Iraqi army special forces.
Kataib Hezbollah and similar Iran-allied militias initially bore the brunt of fighting ISIS, according to Patrick Theros, a former U.S. ambassador to Qatar and now a strategic advisor to the Gulf International think tank in Washington, D.C.
“The militias are not Iranian controlled,” Theros tells me in a phone interview. “The Iranians can’t just send an order and be confident it will be obeyed.”
Those assassinations were a huge mistake, according to Nader Talebzadeh, an analyst and influential TV host in Iran. “What the American President did was unify the Iranian people and took things to a different level,” he tells me in an interview.
“That makes us look like an occupying force,” Theros notes wryly.
Iraqis have plenty of legitimate complaints against their leaders in Tehran. Iranian troops entered Iraq to assist the fight against ISIS, but stayed to spread Iranian influence. Many resent Iran’s role in supporting .. https://apnews.com/13c1f4d0ffdd4908ba340abf9631a3cb .. brutal and corrupt Iraqi politicians.
[INSERT: Yet another U.S. trained and protected ME is installed and over years, in this case it looks 17 years, rises to the top of a foreign sovereign country. Al-Zurufi seems to be new to the board.]
Iraqi politicians are wheeling and dealing over al-Zurufi’s nomination. He has U.S. backing and is hoping for Iranian support as well.
But Theros says the world shouldn’t write off Iraq’s protest movement. “Unless the government addresses the issues they were protesting, they will be back,” he says. “It’s gone dormant, but it’s not dead.”
Iran currently faces a series of crises: low international oil prices, major flooding in the south .. http://floodlist.com/tag/iran , and a spreading coronavirus pandemic.
“They can’t do it,” Theros says. “They have no choice but to choose Iran over the United States.”
So the ball is in the United States’ court. Trump can continue his “maximum pressure campaign” against Iran and face continued Iraqi attacks on U.S. troops. Or he can back off to focus on domestic concerns and avoid a wider war.
Iranians can wait. They may yet see regime change in Washington this November, long before it comes to Tehran.