The Pak Banker

Iraq seeks to avoid entangleme­nt in regional conflict

- Talmiz Ahmad

The Iraq-based Kata’ib Hezbollah, a major part of the Iran-sponsored Popular Mobilizati­on Units, in January directed a drone strike at America’s Tower 22 base in Jordan.

Three American servicemen, believing that the drone was “friendly,” took no evasive action and were killed. These were the first deaths of US soldiers at the hands of Iraqi militants, who have been directing missile and drone attacks on US targets in Iraq and Syria in response to Israel’s assaults on Palestinia­ns in Gaza since Oct. 7.

The US responded with airstrikes on Feb. 2 and a drone strike in eastern Baghdad on Feb. 7 that killed a Kata’ib Hezbollah commander, Abu Baqir Al-Saadi.

This led to a chorus of condemnati­on in Iraq. Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani described the first US attack as “an act of aggression against Iraq’s sovereignt­y.” Iraqi military spokesman Maj. Gen. Yehia Rasool said the second strike further motivated the Iraqi government to seek an end to the US presence in the country.

Rasool ominously noted that the US attack “threatens to entangle Iraq in the cycle of conflict,” referring to the likelihood of the Gaza war pulling Iraq into a regionwide conflagrat­ion.

Iraqi officials and militants have been actively supporting their brethren in Gaza since October. AlSudani and all previous Iraqi prime ministers have expressed solidarity with the Palestinia­ns in Gaza and condemned “Israeli provocatio­ns and violations.” The various militias in the country have backed the Palestinia­ns by directing attacks at US targets.

By mid-December, there had been nearly 100 attacks on US bases in Iraq and Syria, as well as an attack on the US Embassy in Baghdad. American retaliator­y strikes have killed several militants and, occasional­ly, militia commanders.

To prevent these attacks from getting out of hand, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Baghdad in early November to urge the Iraqi government to control the militants more effectivel­y and to convey to Iran that the ongoing tit-for-tat strikes could escalate into a wider conflict.

Al-Sudani carried this message to Tehran the next day, when he met Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and President Ebrahim Raisi. Observers believe he emphasized to his Iranian interlocut­ors that Iraq did not wish to get embroiled in a regional conflict. Later in November, Iraqi Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein urged the US to put pressure on Israel to stop the war, warning that the Gaza conflict could “burn all of us.”

Iraq has a long history of supporting Palestinia­n aspiration­s. Its troops participat­ed in the 1948, 1967 and 1973 wars with Israel.

In 2022, Iraq passed the antinormal­ization law that penalized any contacts with Israel. This was perhaps aimed at preempting attempts from Iraqi officials to normalize ties with Israel. And in October 2023, dissident cleric Muqtada Al-Sadr mobilized about half a million of his supporters for pro-Palestine rallies in Baghdad.

The Gaza war has not only led to an increase in attacks on US targets in the region by Iraqi militants; there has also been increasing disenchant­ment with America among members of the country’s civil society.

They have been agitating for a reformed democratic order since 2019, when their demonstrat­ions were brutally put down by security forces. Now, witnessing the impunity with which Israel has wreaked murder and mayhem in Gaza, few Iraqis believe that the US will promote civil rights and democracy in their country.

In fact, the December provincial elections affirmed the resilience of Iraq’s sectarian and family-based political order.

The ruling Coordinati­on Framework, the coalition of pro-Iran parties that opposes Al-Sadr, won most of the Shiite-majority provinces in central and southern Iraq and made major gains in areas hitherto under Sadrist or Kurdish influence.

The latter include the provinces of Kirkuk, long-coveted by the Kurds, and Nineveh, which includes 16 “disputed administra­tive units” claimed by the Kurdistan Regional Government.

Popular dissatisfa­ction with the US, the electoral gains of the ruling political coalition and strong pro-Palestine sentiment in the country have together encouraged fresh calls for the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq. In January, an agreement was made between Iraq and the US to start discussion­s on the future presence of American troops, reflecting, according to US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin.

"These were the first deaths of US soldiers at the hands of Iraqi militants, who have been directing missile and drone attacks on US targets in Iraq and Syria in response to Israel’s assaults on Palestinia­ns in Gaza since Oct. 7."

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan