January 02, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - The
scene in the Green Zone in Baghdad easily
evokes memories of Tehran forty years ago. A
U.S. embassy in the Persian Gulf region is
under siege by an angry mob. The protestors,
predominantly young, break through the outer
walls of the compound as U.S. diplomats take
refuge in a safe room. President Trump
implicitly extends the parallel by reacting
in the narrowly anti-Iran terms that have
defined his policies in this part of the
world. “Iran is orchestrating an attack on
the U.S. Embassy in Iraq,” Trump tweeted
from Mar-a-Lago. “To those many millions of
people in Iraq who want freedom and who
don’t want to be dominated and controlled by
Iran, this is your time!”
But a closer look at what has been
happening in Iraq suggests that genuine
anger had much more to do with events than
any orchestration did. The protestors who
smashed their way into the embassy compound
did so in
defiance of appeals from leaders armed
with loudspeakers. And the popular anger
displayed at the embassy was also quite
visible elsewhere in Iraq. If there is a
parallel with Tehran in 1979, it is to be
found primarily in a U.S. failure to
anticipate and understand the nature of the
anti-U.S. anger so much in evidence.
The newest outburst in Baghdad is in
response to U.S. airstrikes Sunday on
facilities in Iraq of the Kataib Hezbollah
militia, which killed at least 25 and
wounded at least 55 more. The airstrikes
were billed as retaliation for a rocket
fired two days earlier at an Iraqi naval
base that killed an American civilian
contractor and wounded “several” other Iraqi
and U.S. personnel. Iraqis noticed the
obvious disproportionality between the U.S.
airstrikes and what they were retaliating
for, and this disproportionality was part of
what underlay the angry popular response.
Another part was the fact that a foreign
power was taking it on itself to conduct a
military attack inside Iraq against Iraqi
citizens.
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The senior Shia cleric in Iraq, Grand
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, was reflecting
the sentiments of many Iraqis when he
condemned what he called “atrocious
aggression” by the United States and
violation of Iraqi sovereignty “under
the pretext of responding to some
illegal practices by some sides.”
Sistani said that “only Iraqi
authorities are entitled to deal with
these practices and take necessary
measures to prevent them.”
Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi
condemned the U.S. attack as “an
unacceptable vicious assault that will have
dangerous consequences.” Iraq’s National
Security Council stated that it would have
to reconsider its relationship with the
U.S.-led coalition working against the
Islamic State (ISIS) in Iraq.
Before the events of the past few days,
recurrent popular protests in Iraq had
acquired an anti-Iran tinge. The Trump
administration may have interpreted this as
Iraqis finally deciding to go all in with
the administration’s own
nothing-but-hostility posture toward Iran
that has been the basis of its “maximum
pressure” campaign against Iran. If so, this
interpretation was mistaken. Most Iraqis do
not want endless confrontation with Iran and
a risk of once again suffering, as they did
in the 1980s, from open conflict with Iran.
Most Iraqis are dissatisfied with the
performance of their own government. Given
that Iran is the most influential foreign
power in Iraq today, it became an auxiliary
target of the popular dissatisfaction with
the Iraqi regime. If the United States had
instead been the most influential foreign
power in Iraq today, it would have been that
auxiliary target.
The U.S. knack for counterproductive
military actions in Iraq continues. The war
that the Bush administration launched in
2003 provided the biggest single boost to
Iranian influence in Iraq, or for that
matter to Iranian influence in the Persian
Gulf region generally. Now this week’s U.S.
airstrikes have converted what had been a
story of popular protests with an anti-Iran
tinge into a story of strongly anti-U.S.
protests.
If there has been Iranian orchestration
behind any of this — including the rocket
attack on the Iraqi naval base last week —
it would have been a calculated attempt to
provoke just the sort of unpopular U.S.
response that in fact occurred, thereby
taking the focus of angry Iraqi citizens
away from Iran and redirecting it toward the
United States.
U.S. military personnel are in Iraq
supposedly on an anti-ISIS mission. Under
the Trump administration, there appears to
have been mission creep, in Iraq as well as
Syria, in which somehow confronting Iran has
become part of a new mission. That mission
has never been justified. No one has
explained exactly how the current state of
Iraqi-Iranian relations threatens U.S.
interests — beyond any threat to the very
same U.S. military personnel in Iraq, which
brings circular reasoning into play.
Seemingly forgotten among all this is how
Iran, and the Iraqi elements it supports,
also have been performing an anti-ISIS
mission.
The United States would serve its own
interests by letting that mission be
performed by the locals best in position to
perform it, and moving toward a withdrawal
of its forces from Iraq. Let someone else
worry about inflaming popular sentiment
through perceived violations of sovereignty.
Such a redirection of U.S. policy would take
those troops out of harm’s way. It would
reduce the risk of a U.S.-Iranian clash,
benefiting nobody, on an Iraqi battlefield.
And it would reduce the chance of anther
U.S. embassy being overrun by an angry mob.