Gulf Today

US extends Iraq waiver over Iran sanctions

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The United States is extending a waiver to let energy-hungry Iraq keep buying power from Iran, despite Washington’s campaign of sanctions aimed at curbing Tehran, an official said.

The State Department issued a second three-month exemption from Iran sanctions for Iraq, mindful not to destabiliz­e the war-torn country increasing­ly reliant on Iranian gas and electricit­y to cope with chronic blackouts that have triggered unrest.

“While this waiver is intended to help Iraq mitigate energy shortages, we continue to discuss our Iran-related sanctions with our partners in Iraq,” a State Department official said.

The official said that increasing Iraq’s capacities and diversifyi­ng imports “will strengthen Iraq’s economy and developmen­t as well as encourage a united, democratic and prosperous Iraq free from malign Iranian influence.”

Despite Washington’s repeated warnings, Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein has walked a fine line and maintained warm ties with Iran, with which Iraq’s majority Shiite community shares religious affinities.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani paid a visit last week to Iraq, where he highlighte­d Tehran’s support in batling the Daesh extremist movement and said that the United States was “despised” in the region. Last year, US President Donald Trump pulled out of an internatio­nal deal on curbing Iran’s nuclear program that was negotiated by his predecesso­r Barack Obama.

Trump instead imposed sweeping sanctions on Iran as he seeks to reduce the regional role of the Shiite clerical state, a foe of US allies Saudi Arabia and Israel.

But the US approach has met strong opposition, with European powers encouragin­g their companies to stay present in Iran so as to safeguard the denucleari­zation accord.

Iraqi security and hospital officials say three soldiers have been killed and five wounded in an ambush on an army patrol north of Baghdad.

The officials say a group of militants opened fire on the patrol Tuesday in the town of Tarmiyah, a former insurgent stronghold about 50 kilometers (30 miles) north of the Iraqi capital.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulation­s, blamed the Daesh group, but there was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity.

The shooting was the latest in a string of attacks along roads and in villages in areas north and west of Baghdad, many of them claimed by the extremist group.

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