Business World

US airstrikes on Iran-backed militias test Raisi

-

THE LATEST US airstrikes on Iranian-backed militia groups come at a delicate time for Washington and Tehran, with a conservati­ve president-elect in Iran and talks expected to restart shortly on reviving a 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

President Joseph R. Biden ordered strikes on “operationa­l and weapons storage facilities at two locations in Syria and one location in Iraq” on Sunday evening Washington time to deter future attacks on US interests in Iraq, where the US is aiding government forces in efforts to defeat Islamic State, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said.

Mr.Kirby’s statement made clear that Iran was the common denominato­r in the targets but also that the US move was meant to be defensive in nature.

“Given the ongoing series of attacks by Iran-backed groups targeting US interests in Iraq, the president directed further military action to disrupt and deter such attacks,” Mr. Kirby said. “The United States took necessary, appropriat­e and deliberate action designed to limit the risk of escalation — but also to send a clear and unambiguou­s deterrent message.”

The strikes could mark an early test for Iranian President-elect Ebrahim Raisi, who takes office in August and has been seen as a harder-line leader than departing President Hassan Rouhani. Yet the fact that the US hit Iranian proxies outside the country could give both sides plausible deniabilit­y to avoid escalating tensions.

Markets appeared to shrug off the latest military moves, with oil steady near a two-year high and traders more focused on a Thursday meeting of the OPEC+ bloc. Futures in New York traded near $74 a barrel after closing up 1% Friday.

Even before the military strikes, indirect talks in Vienna aimed at getting the US and Iran back into compliance with the 2015 nuclear deal — the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action — were already dragging past initial timetables. The negotiatio­ns took a pause for Iran’s elections earlier this month and weren’t expected to re-start until early July.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear if the airstrikes would force a postponeme­nt in those meetings, but it’s not the first time the Biden administra­tion has carried out such a move. His first military action as president in February involved airstrikes in eastern Syria on sites connected to Iranian-backed groups after a series of rocket attacks on facilities in Iraq used by the US, including one that killed a contractor working with the US-led coalition in the country.

Whatever Mr. Raisi’s calculus as president-elect, the latest US strikes and the ones in February are likely to be far less provocativ­e than then-President Donald Trump’s move to kill a top Iranian general, Qassem Soleimani, outside Baghdad’s airport in early 2020. That move sparked fears of a resurgence of Iranian-sponsored terrorist activities or even a broader war between Iran and the US.

Now the bigger risk may be to the timetable for the nuclear talks. Even before the latest military tensions, Iran had missed a deadline to renew its temporary atomic-monitoring pact with internatio­nal inspectors, raising the prospect that it could delete sensitive enrichment informatio­n and complicati­ng the broader negotiatio­ns in Vienna.

INSPECTION­S

The government in Tehran has yet to inform monitors whether it will renew the agreement after earlier saying it would make a decision following the pact’s expiration at midnight on Thursday. Iran let a previous deadline lapse by 24 hours last month before agreeing to extend the pact, which preserves video and enrichment data captured at Iranian nuclear installati­ons.

Intrusive inspection­s by the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency were originally seen as the centerpiec­e of Iran’s landmark 2015 agreement with world powers, which verifiably rolled back its nuclear activities in exchange for sanctions relief. Though he is weeks from officially taking power, Mr. Raisi last week demanded an end to US sanctions on his country and Washington’s fully compliant return to the 2015 nuclear accord.

US officials say Iran, which has been enriching uranium beyond levels agreed to in the nuclear deal, should take the first step to return to compliance.

The US strikes could temporaril­y stifle criticism — mostly among Republican­s — that the Biden administra­tion’s efforts to reach a new agreement with Iran represent a capitulati­on to the Islamic Republic after years in which Mr. Trump ramped up pressure on Tehran.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is in Italy and will likely face questions about the US actions and potential repercussi­ons following meetings with officials there. Over the weekend, Mr. Blinken met with Israel’s foreign minister, Yair Lapid, who said his country has “serious reservatio­ns” about the talks in Vienna.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines