The National - News

US PLAN TO TURN THE SCREW ON IRAN

Trump to weigh ‘more aggressive’ responses to Tehran’s Gulf actions

- JOYCE KARAM

Donald Trump may embrace a plan that would escalate counter-Iranian measures in the Arab Gulf, Yemen and Egypt while largely avoiding any confrontat­ion with Tehran’s paramilita­ries in Iraq and Syria.

The long-awaited Iran strategy review was presented to the US president during a national security council meeting on Friday and calls “for more aggressive US responses to Iran’s forces”, Reuters reported.

The proposal – prepared by defence secretary Jim Mattis, secretary of state Rex Tillerson and national security adviser H R McMaster – is expected to be released by the end of the month. A US official confirmed to The

National that the meeting had taken place and that the Iran review, work on which started early in the summer, was nearing completion.

The plan is intended to increase pressure on Tehran to curb its ballistic missile programme and support for militants in the region.

A US official said that the policy would involve more aggressive intercepti­ons of Iranian arms shipments, including those to Houthi rebels in Yemen and Palestinia­n groups in Gaza and the Sinai Peninsula, Reuters reported

The plan also recommends that the United States be more aggressive in tackling Iranian influence in Bahrain.

A high-level Bahraini delegation recently visited Washington and was pleased with the Trump plan taking shape to counter Iran, diplomatic sources said.

The proposal would also mean the US navy could respond more forcefully when confronted by armed speed boats operated by Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps. The confrontat­ions usually take place in the Strait of Hormuz.

The plan does not include escalating US military activity in Syria and Iraq, where the priority remains defeating ISIL.

A senior US official said that looser rules risked embroiling Washington in a conflict with Iran at a time when US forces remained overstretc­hed.

Mark Dubowitz, the executive director at the Foundation for Defence of Democracie­s, said he was not surprised by the proposal.

“The administra­tion may

want to sequence its regional strategy by first demolishin­g ISIL before turning its attention to neutralisi­ng and rolling back Iranian aggression in Syria and Iraq,” he said. But it better not wait too long, “or the Iranian regime will be deeply entrenched from Iran through Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and into the Mediterran­ean”.

At that point “it will be impossible to dislodge without a major commitment of US firepower”, Mr Dubowitz said.

Faysal Itani, a senior fellow with Atlantic Council’s Rafik Hariri Centre for the Middle East, said the US president “wants to push back against Iran mostly in the sense of protecting allies from direct Iranian threat, be it against Bahrain or in Saudi Arabia via Yemen”.

“These are the allies’ primary concerns, that come ahead of Iran’s role in Iraq and Syria.”

Mr Itani called the proposal “cautious and unambitiou­s, but admittedly focused on issues of primary concern to allies”.

“All the measures mentioned in the report are basically actions on the periphery that are conservati­ve and do not change the strategic equation,” he said.

One variable that could tip the balance, according to Mr Dubowitz, is Mr Trump’s verdict on the nuclear deal.

His “strategy will not be paralysed by the deal”, said Mr Dubowitz, in contrast with his predecesso­r Barack Obama. “Mr Trump is prepared to walk away at any time and to use instrument­s of American power,” he said.

Most of Mr Trump’s national security aides favour staying in the pact, as do US allies Israel and Saudi Arabia despite their concerns about Iran’s adherence to the agreement.

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