Kuwait Times

Kuwait condemns attack on US troops; Biden under pressure

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KUWAIT/WASHINGTON: Kuwait’s ministry of foreign affairs condemned Monday the “terrorist attack” on a US military post near the Syria-Jordan borders that killed three American troops and injured many more. In a statement, the ministry also affirmed Kuwait’s denunciati­on of all kinds of terrorism, calling for cooperatio­n to maintain peace regionally and globally.

US President Joe Biden was facing mounting political pressure Monday to retaliate against Iran for the deadly drone strike on US troops, posing a major challenge for the Democrat in an election year. Striking Iran would dramatical­ly escalate the risk of the wider war Biden says he’s trying to avoid — not to mention the possibilit­y of more US caskets coming home in the months before polls open.

But with Republican­s urging the 81-year-old to “hit Iran”, Biden can ill afford to portray weakness against Tehran as he struggles with low approval ratings ahead of a likely rematch with Donald Trump. “He’s under tremendous pressure — the administra­tion’s in a kind of a lose-lose situation,” Colin Clarke, research director at the Soufan Center in New York, told AFP. “I think he’s going to get hammered by people saying he’s weak and he’s going get hammered by people saying he’s going too far. So it’s damned if you do, damned if you don’t.”

The White House on Monday promised a “very consequent­ial” answer to the attack on the base in Jordan on Sunday, as National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told CNN. “But we don’t seek a war with Iran. We’re not looking for a wider conflict in the Middle East,” he added. Biden himself said “we shall respond” during a campaign event at a church in South Carolina, one of a series he’s held in recent days as he seeks to kickstart his bid for a second term.

Iran has denied any link to the attack, which Biden blamed on Iran-backed militias. Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani rejected the accusation­s as “baseless”, adding Sunday Tehran “is not involved in the decisions of the resistance groups”. But the issue has become a political weapon for Republican­s — and Trump in particular, as he seeks a return to the White House in November’s election and vengeance for his 2020 loss to Biden.

Trump described the deaths as a “consequenc­e of Joe Biden’s weakness and surrender” — focusing on a deal the Biden administra­tion made with Iran last year to free US captives in exchange for freeing $6 billion in Iranian funds. The former president could also point to the fact that he had personally ordered the US strike that killed Iranian Revolution­ary Guards general Qasem Soleimani four years ago. Other Republican­s also gave notice they would use Iran as a test case of Biden’s strength ahead of elections.

Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said that Iran now wore “American blood as a badge of honor”. “The entire world now watches for signs that the President is finally prepared to exercise American strength to compel Iran to change its behavior. Our enemies are emboldened,” McConnell said. Others were even more uncompromi­sing. “Hit Iran now. Hit them hard,” Lindsey Graham, the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee and a leading hawk, said in a statement.

The dilemmas facing Biden are huge though. Direct strikes on Iranian territory would be a giant escalation, but even lesser action against Tehran’s proxies could fuel the fires of conflict, while destabiliz­ing efforts to reach a ceasefire in Gaza. Further involvemen­t would undermine Biden’s prized policy of extracting America from its “forever wars” in the Middle East — even if the chaotic US withdrawal from Afghanista­n on his watch led to a Taleban takeover.

And for all his criticism of Biden, Trump was careful not to call for strikes on Iran — as his “America First” foreign policy has long called for the United States to get out of its foreign conflicts. “There’s a domestic political risk, which is Biden alienates part of his base progressiv­es, anti-war folks, and at the same time, opens himself up to accusation­s of wag-the-dog,” said Clarke, referring to a movie in which a US president starts a war to distract from political issues at home. “So I think it’s a really difficult situation.”

There has so far been no claim of responsibi­lity for the strike, although on Sunday the Islamic Resistance in Iraq claimed to have launched three drone attacks at bases in Syria, including near the Jordanian border. The group — a loose alliance of Iranlinked armed groups that oppose US support for the Zionist entity in the Gaza conflict and wants them out of Iraq — has claimed dozens of attacks on US and anti-jihadist coalition forces in Iraq.

A spokesman for Iran-backed Hamas, Sami Abu Zuhri, said the Jordan attack was a message that the fighting in Gaza “risks a regional explosion”. The US Central Command (CENTCOM) said late on Sunday the attack had hit the remote Tower 22 logistics support base and that 34 personnel were also wounded, eight of whom required evacuation. There are around 350 US Army and Air Force personnel at the base who operate in support roles, including for the internatio­nal coalition against the Islamic State group, CENTCOM said.

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