Gulf Times

Iraq warns US ties at stake after strikes

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Iraq’s government warned yesterday that its relations with the United States were at risk after deadly American air strikes against a proIran group sparked anger on the streets with protesters torching US flags. At least 25 fighters were killed in Sunday night’s attacks which saw US planes hit several bases belonging to the Hezbollah Brigades, one of the most radical factions of Hashed Al-Shaabi, a Tehran-backed Iraqi paramilita­ry coalition.

Iraq’s government warned yesterday that its relations with the United States were at risk after deadly American air strikes against a group sparked anger on the streets with protesters torching US flags.

At least 25 fighters were killed in Sunday night’s attacks which saw US planes hit several bases belonging to the Hezbollah Brigades, one of the most radical factions of Hashed Al-Shaabi, an Iraqi paramilita­ry coalition.

It came at a time when Iraq is caught up in mounting tensions between its allies Tehran and Washington and grappling with huge street protests against corruption but also against Iran’s growing political influence in the country.

The strikes “killed 25 and wounded 51, including commanders and fighters, and the toll could yet rise,” said the Hashed, which holds major sway in Iraq.

Victims were still being pulled from the rubble of bases near Al-Qaim, an Iraqi district bordering Syria, yesterday, it said.

Iraq’s government, acting in a caretaker capacity following the resignatio­n of prime minister Abdel Abdel Mahdi in the face of street protests, denounced the strikes and warned they could affect ties with Washington

“American forces acted on their political priorities, not those of the Iraqis,” a statement said, adding that such strikes “violate the sovereignt­y of Iraq”. The attacks “force Iraq to review its relations and its security, political and legal framework to protect its sovereignt­y”, the government added.

The warning came as demonstrat­ors torched US flags in the southern cities of Basra and Najaf and in Kirkuk north of Baghdad while lawmakers called for US troops to be booted out of Iraq.

Parliament’s deputy speaker, part of influentia­l cleric Moqtada Sadr’s bloc, called on the Iraqi state to “take all necessary measures” in the face of the US attacks.

Dozens of lawmakers called on the government to review an agreement allowing the deployment of 5,200 US soldiers in the country, saying the strikes amount to a violation that renders the pact obsolete.

US Assistant Secretary of State David Schenker said the strikes were a message to Iran after months of “restraint” by the administra­tion of President Donald Trump.

Schenker said the strikes were in retaliatio­n for the death Friday of a US civilian contractor in Kirkuk in a Hezbollah Brigades rocket attack.

“We thought it important to hit a significan­t target set to send a very clear message to them about how serious we take American lives,” Schenker told reporters.

“This was a response that was serious, but was, I think in many ways, proportion­ate,” he said.

“We don’t want an escalation here, we want a de-escalation.”

Tensions have soared between the United States and Iran since Washington pulled out of a multilater­al nuclear agreement with Tehran last year and imposed crippling sanctions Iraqi leaders fear their country could become a battlegrou­nd.

The office of Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, who is highly revered by Iraq’s majority community, denounced the attacks.

“The authoritie­s must prevent Iraq being used as a place for the settling of accounts,” it said in reference to US-Iran tensions.

US sources say pro-Iran armed factions now pose a greater threat than the Islamic State group, whose rise saw the US freshly deploy troops on Iraqi soil.

Sunday night’s strikes revived calls from Iraq and beyond for US troops to leave.

Iraq’s Hezbollah Brigades demanded the “withdrawal of the American enemy”, a call echoed by the pro-Iran groups Badr organisati­on and Assaib Ahl al-Haq — whose leaders were recently hit with US sanctions.

 ??  ?? Iraqis wave Hashed Al-Shaabi armed network flags yesterday, during a demonstrat­ion to denounce the previous night’s attacks by US planes on several bases belonging to the Hezbollah Brigades near Al-Qaim.
Iraqis wave Hashed Al-Shaabi armed network flags yesterday, during a demonstrat­ion to denounce the previous night’s attacks by US planes on several bases belonging to the Hezbollah Brigades near Al-Qaim.

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