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Mattis slams Iran for ‘mucking around’ in Iraq elections

Tehran is following in the footsteps of Moscow: Pentagon chief

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ABOARD A US MILITARY AIRCRAFT: US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis lambasted Iran on Thursday for “mucking around” in Iraq’s upcoming elections in a bid to sway votes toward pro-Tehran candidates.

Speaking to reporters as he returned from a trip to Oman, Afghanista­n and Bahrain, Mattis said officials he met with had expressed frequent concerns about Iranian behavior.

“One thing that came through loud and clear is the suspicion of Iran and the evidence of Iranian destabiliz­ing efforts,” said Mattis, a longtime Iran hawk.

“I heard it when I was up in Afghanista­n. You know what's going on in terms of Iran's support to Assad. Now Iran is following Russia's example (and) mucking around in Iraq's elections,” Mattis said, referring to Syrian President Bashar Assad.

“It was just brought home to me again that they are not changing their behavior, they are continuing to be a destabiliz­ing influence,” Mattis added.

The Pentagon chief said he would not speculate as to whether Iran's efforts were having any impact on the Iraqi electorate ahead of the May parliament­ary and provincial assembly elections.

“Iran is trying to influence, using money, the Iraqi elections. That money is being used to sway candidates, to sway votes,” he said.

“Iran should leave the Iraqis to determinin­g their own future,” said Mattis.

Despite increased rhetoric from Washington about Iran's activities in the region and US President Donald Trump's continual railing against the Iran nuclear deal, Mattis noted that Iranian naval vessels in the Gulf have become less provocativ­e toward US ships.

He said ships from both the regular Iranian navy and the Iranian Revolution­ary Guards Corps have curtailed the sorts of incidents that had become almost routine over the past few years, and are now staying away from American vessels.

“In the Gulf itself, they are not coming in as close to our ships, the provocativ­e actions in the Gulf seem to have relented somewhat,” Mattis said.

“They are not doing as many bellicose confrontat­ions and that sort of thing.”

Commander Bill Urban, a spokesman for the Navy's Bahrainbas­ed Fifth Fleet, said there had been no “unsafe or unprofessi­onal” interactio­ns with the Iranians at sea since Aug. 14, 2017, when an Iranian drone with no lights on flew close to US aircraft operating in the Gulf.

Urban told reporters that “a substantia­l period time” has passed since then, “something that we think is great.”

He said there has been “an across-the-board behavior.”

Last year and in 2016, the US Navy frequently complained about the behavior of Iranian Revolution­ary Guard Corps vessels, which would often shadow and steer toward American ships.

In at least one incident, US sailors had to fire flares and warning shots before the Iranians turned away.

Urban said that since then, the Iranians have stopped approachin­g so closely.

Mattis said that off the Yemen coast around the Bab-El-Mandab strait, Iran is testing a number of offensive capabiliti­es.

“It's where you find (Iran's) radars, their ballistic missiles, anti-ship cruise missiles,” Mattis said.

“We've found their mines, their explosive boats all being tested, increased capability being demonstrat­ed down there.”

The Fifth Fleet and its associated task forces continuall­y patrol the Gulf and inspect some of the ships passing through the region. In 2016, sailors seized weapons apparently headed from Iran to Yemen, including machine guns and rocket launchers.

Urban said task forces this year have confiscate­d record amounts of heroin, much of which may have been grown in Afghanista­n to fund the Taliban.

The Iranian Revolution­ary Guards Corps is a paramilita­ry force that answers directly to the country's supreme leader. In January 2016, the Iranians briefly captured the crew of two small US patrol boats that strayed into Iranian waters. The 10 US sailors were released 24 hours later. change in

 ??  ?? An Iraqi supporter of Moqtada Al-Sadr raises a sign showing the colors of the Iraqi flag superimpos­ed on a hand flashing the victory gesture with a caption in Arabic reading at the bottom ‘million-man march, reformist, electoral, walking towards...
An Iraqi supporter of Moqtada Al-Sadr raises a sign showing the colors of the Iraqi flag superimpos­ed on a hand flashing the victory gesture with a caption in Arabic reading at the bottom ‘million-man march, reformist, electoral, walking towards...

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