Iran eclipses US as Iraq’s ally in fight against militants
Iraqi Hezbollah
scouts parade with a portrait of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, as they mark Al-Quds Day or Jerusalem Day in Baghdad, Iraq, in
August 2013. The fight against the Islamic State has deepened the bond
between Iraq’s Shiite-led government and Iran.
|
|
The Associated Press
Published: January 12, 2015
Shiite, non-Arab Iran
has effectively taken charge of Iraq’s defense against the Sunni radical
group, meeting the Iraqi government’s need for immediate help on the
ground.
Two to three Iranian
military aircraft a day land at Baghdad airport, bringing in weapons and
ammunition. Iran’s most potent military force and best known general — the Revolutionary Guard’s elite Quds Force and its commander Gen. Ghasem Soleimani — are
organizing Iraqi forces and have become the de facto leaders of Iraqi
Shiite militias that are the backbone of the fight. Iran carried out
airstrikes to help push militants from an Iraqi province on its border.
The
result is that Tehran’s influence in Iraq, already high since U.S.
forces left at the end of 2011, has grown to an unprecedented level.
Airstrikes by the
U.S.-led coalition have helped push back the militants in parts of the
north, including breaking a siege of a Shiite town. But many Iraqis
believe the Americans mainly want to help the Kurds. Airstrikes helped
Kurdish forces stop extremists threatening the capital of the Kurdish
autonomous zone, Irbil, in August. But even that feat is accorded by
many Iraqis to a timely airlift of Iranian arms to the Kurds.
The meltdown of Iraq’s
military in the face of the extremists’ summer blitz across much of
northern and western Iraq gave Iran the opportunity to step in. A
flood of Shiite volunteers joined the fight to fill the void,
bolstering the ranks of Shiite militias already allied with Iran.
Those militias have
now been more or less integrated into Iraq’s official security
apparatus, an Iraqi government official said, calling this the Islamic State group’s “biggest gift” to Tehran.
“Iran’s hold on Iraq grows tighter and faster every day,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the sensitive subject.
Over the past year, Iran sold Iraq nearly $10 billion worth of weapons and hardware, mostly
weapons for urban warfare like assault rifles, heavy machine-guns and
rocket launchers, he said. The daily stream of Iranian cargo planes
bringing weapons to Baghdad was confirmed at a news conference by a
former Shiite militia leader, Jamal Jaafar. Better known by his alias
Abu Mahdi al-Mohandis, Jaafar is second in command of the recently
created state agency in charge of volunteer fighters.
Some Sunnis are
clearly worried. Sunni lawmaker Mohammed al-Karbuly said the United
States must increase its support of Iraq against the extremists in order
to reduce Iran’s influence.
“Iran now dominates Iraq,” he said.
Hadi al-Amiri, a
prominent Shiite politician close to Iran and leader of the powerful
Badr militia, complained in a recent television interview that Iraq was a
victim of decades of “wrong” U.S. policies in the Middle East. He
charged that the precursors of the region’s Sunni extremists had in the
past enjoyed U.S. patronage.
“We fear that the
objective of the U.S.-led coalition is to contain Daesh, rather than
exterminate it,” he said, using the Arabic acronym for the Islamic State
group.
Speaking this week at a
memorial service in Iran for a Revolutionary Guard officer gunned down
by an Islamic State sniper, al-Amiri mused that Iraqi Shiite Prime
Minister Haider al-Abadi’s three-month-old administration would have
been a “government-in-exile” if not for Iran’s swift help to protect
Baghdad, according to Iran’s Fars news agency.
The praise does not just come from Shiite politicians.
During a trip to
Tehran last week, Iraq’s Sunni defense minister, Khaled al-Obeidi, said
Iran’s help against the militants is a “strategic necessity” for Iraq.
U.S. Ambassador to
Iraq Stuart Jones acknowledged to The Associated Press that Iran plays
an important role in fighting the Islamic State group. He made clear
there was no interaction between the U.S. and Iranian operations.
“Let’s face it, Iran
is an important neighbor to Iraq. There has to be cooperation between
Iran and Iraq,” he said in a Dec. 4 interview. “The Iranians are talking
to the Iraqi security forces and we’re talking to Iraqi security forces
. We’re relying on them to do the de-confliction.”
U.S. Army Gen. Martin
Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Iraqi leaders have
kept the U.S. informed about Iranian activities against IS and that
Washington is watching the relationship carefully.
He said if the two
countries grow closer economically or politically, “as long as the Iraqi
government remains committed to inclusivity of all the various groups
inside the country, then I think Iranian influence will be positive.”
But Ali Khedery, a top
U.S. official in Iraq from 2003 until 2009, warned that Iranian
influence will be “strategically catastrophic.”
“It further
consolidates Iran’s grip over the Levant and Iraq,” said Khedery, who
resigned in protest over U.S. failure to thwart Iranian influence.
Iran’s sphere of
influence extends to neighboring Syria, where it has stood by President
Bashar Assad’s regime against the mostly Sunni opposition, and to
Lebanon, where its main proxy, Hezbollah, is that nation’s most powerful
group. Also, the Shiite Houthi rebels’ takeover of parts of Yemen in
recent months has raised concerns of Iranian influence there.
The signs of Iran’s
weight in Iraq are many. The prime minister, the Sunni parliament
speaker and other top politicians have visited Tehran. Most senior Iraqi
Sunni politicians have stopped publicly criticizing Iran and vilifying
Shiite politicians for close ties to Tehran.
On billboards around
Baghdad, death notices of Iraqi militiamen killed in battle are
emblazoned with images of Iran’s late spiritual leader Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, and his successor, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Last month, an unprecedented number of Iranians — estimated at up to 4 million — crossed into Iraq to visit a revered Shiite shrine south of Baghdad for a major holy day. Visa charges for the Iranians have been waived.
The two countries keep
their military cooperation relatively quiet in public. Iran
occasionally publicizes the death in battle of one of its senior
officers in Iraq or speaks of its “advisory” military role. Iraq’s state
media don’t mention Iranian military involvement. Paradoxically, they
do publicize airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition or the arrival of
American advisers.
Soleimani, the Iranian
general, has spent much of the past seven months on Iraq’s front lines,
leading militias and coordinating tactics with government forces.
A fluent Arabic speaker, the 58-year-old has reportedly been nicknamed the “living martyr” by Iran’s Khamenei.
A senior Shiite Iraqi
militiaman who recently met him said he was impressed by his mix of
piety and courage. He said he saw the Iranian general at a forward
position in Baghdad’s western outskirts, discussing coordinates in Farsi
with the gunner of an Iraqi army U.S.-made Abrams tank. The gunner was a
member of the Revolutionary Guard, the militiaman said.
Associated Press
writers Lolita C. Baldor and Ken Dilanian in Washington, and Vivian
Salama and Sameer N. Yacoub in Baghdad contributed to this report.
No comments:
Post a Comment