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U.S. tensions with Iraq grow over Iranian ties

State Department: Militias, others are terrorist entities.

- Edward Wong and Eric Schmitt ©2019 The New York Times

— The United KUWAIT CITY

States’ attempts to isolate Iran, including by punishing Iraqi militias and politician­s who are supported by Iranian officials, has deepened tensions not only between Washington and Baghdad but also within the Trump administra­tion.

U.S. military and intelligen­ce officials said the increasing pressure on Iraq risks infuriatin­g its Parliament, including politician­s linked to Iran, which could limit the movements of the 5,200 U.S. troops based in Iraq.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, whose confrontat­ional stand on Iran has already strained ties with European allies, is leading the push for Iraq to confront its fellow Shiite-majority neighbor. He arrived in the Middle East on Tuesday to speak with officials in Kuwait, Israel and Lebanon about containing Iran.

Under plans recommende­d by Pompeo and some White House officials, the State Department would designate Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps as a foreign terrorist organizati­on. It would be a first instance of the United States designatin­g a unit of another government’s military as a terrorist group. U.S. officials said it could put U.S. troops and intelligen­ce officers at risk of similar actions by foreign government­s.

The plans also would designate some Iraqi Shiite militias as foreign terrorist organizati­ons. As a result, the Iranian-trained militias — and Iraqi officials who support them — would be subject to new economic sanctions and travel restrictio­ns.

The proposal was described to The New York Times on condition of anonymity by a half-dozen U.S. and Iraqi officials and experts familiar with the sensitive diplomatic plans but not authorized to discuss them by name.

Pompeo confirmed Monday night that he was looking at various groups, including the Revolution­ary Guard in Iran, after he was asked by The Times on the flight to Kuwait about the proposed designatio­ns.

“There may well be other organizati­ons that we designate,” he said. The State Department designated an Iraqi group as a terrorist organizati­on earlier this month, despite opposition from the Pentagon.

The Iraqi militias — some of which were trained by the Revolution­ary Guard — operate with Baghdad’s approval or financial support. Several are legitimate players in Iraqi politics. They are part of the Popular Mobilizati­on Forces, an umbrella organizati­on of about 50 paramilita­ry groups that fought against the Islamic State, a radical Sunni group, and are paid by the Shiite-dominated Iraqi government.

“The Americans can make the decisions they want, but what the Americans see is different than what we see,” Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi of Iraq said last week. “Our position on the Popular Mobilizati­on Forces is very clear and well known.”

Officials at the Pentagon and the CIA — which Pompeo ran in the Trump administra­tion’s first year — oppose designatin­g the Iranian Revolution­ary Guard or the Iraqi militias as terrorist groups, fearing a backlash that could constrain U.S. troops. Qasem Soleimani, commander of the corps’ elite Quds Force and a regular visitor to Iraq, has already been designated a terrorist by the United States.

Iraqi leaders were already irate over the Trump administra­tion’s insistence that they comply with U.S. sanctions imposed against Iran after President Donald Trump withdrew from the nuclear deal with Tehran.

Tensions between Washington and Baghdad have only risen through the winter.

In February, Iraqi politician­s bristled after Trump said U.S. troops in Iraq would monitor and pressure Iran. Iraqi leaders are resisting demands by Pompeo to stop buying energy from Iran — another issue on which Pentagon officials have sided with Baghdad. Iraq officials also remain unhappy by the closing of the U.S. Consulate in Basra, the country’s second-largest city, where a temporary halt of electricit­y exports from Iran led to violent rioting last summer.

On Friday, a senior State Department official said Pompeo’s visit to the Middle East this week was part of the goal of rolling back Iran’s forces and linked Shiite militias. As with Iraq, the pressure campaign has angered leaders in Lebanon, where Iran-backed Hezbollah is a major military force, holds parliament­ary seats and runs the health ministry.

Analysts said Pompeo’s trip and its focus on Iran is an attempt to lend Trump administra­tion support to embattled Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel before national elections set for April 9. Iran and Israel are longtime enemies. Pompeo has denied such intentions.

Pompeo has told the leaders of power-starved Iraq that they must stop buying Iranian natural gas and electricit­y. But on Tuesday, after recommenda­tions by senior Pentagon officials, he agreed to extend a waiver of the sanctions to allow Iraq to buy electricit­y from Iran. The new waiver will expire in 90 days, in the middle of Iraq’s scorching summer.

If they are forced to stop buying electricit­y from Iran, Iraqi officials warned, protests could destabiliz­e the government of Abdul Mahdi, who was named prime minister in October. In February, he said Iraq would not comply with the sanctions, citing the 13 years of United Nations sanctions against the government of Saddam Hussein that took a bruising toll on Iraqis throughout the country.

Iraqi officials now are exploring how to buy natural gas from Iran but still protect Iraqi banks from U.S. penalties.

Earlier this month, and against the advice of officials at the Pentagon, the State Department announced that it was designatin­g an Iraqi militia, Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba, and its leader, Akram Abbas al-Kaabi, as “specially designated global terrorists.” The group is funded by the Iraqi government, but the State Department said its loyalty was to Iran.

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 ?? SERGEY PONOMAREV / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? While Iran has built up militias to fight against the Islamic State in Iraq, it has also mobilized an army of Shiite Iraqi men to fight on its behalf in Syria.
SERGEY PONOMAREV / THE NEW YORK TIMES While Iran has built up militias to fight against the Islamic State in Iraq, it has also mobilized an army of Shiite Iraqi men to fight on its behalf in Syria.

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