Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Iran undeterred by US strikes, as US withdrawing from Middle East – The Jerusalem Post

Iranian pro-government media attempted to ignore the US airstrikes on pro-Iran militias that took place over the weekend. Even though the US struck half a dozen sites with dozens of munitions, the regime in Tehran appears to be downplaying them.

This is likely because very few Iran-affiliated operatives were killed in the attacks. Also, Iran had a week to wait and plan what to do after its Iraq-based militias killed three Americans in Jordan.

At the same time, pro-Iran media in the region, such as the Al-Mayadeen TV channel, have claimed that the sites that were struck had been evacuated, and they say that pro-Iran groups have already begun targeting the US again.

Iran and its militias have also made it clear that countries in the region should not assist the US. Jordan, for instance, had downplayed the attack on its territory after it took place on January 27. In essence, the region feels that this kind of tit-for-tat conflict, in which Iran uses proxies to attack the US and the Americans strike warehouses and other sites linked to the proxies, might as well be happening on another continent.

This is because in the last year, the region has sought to put the era of these kinds of conflicts behind it. For instance, China brokered a Saudi-Iran normalization deal. There is a ceasefire in Yemen with the Houthis. Yet the Houthis have carried out dozens of attacks on ships in the Red Sea, destabilizing the region.

Key US partners in the region, such as Egypt and Jordan, want to downplay the tensions. Egypt, for instance, is not interested in discussing the Red Sea, while Jordan put out a statement making it clear that it was not involved in the US strikes in Iraq and Syria.

The Royal Jordanian Air Force did not participate in the air strikes carried out by the US Air Force inside Iraqi territory, the Jordanian military said. There is no truth to the press reports about the participation of Jordanian aircraft in the operations carried out by US forces inside Iraq. The Jordanian Armed Forces-Arab Army respects the sovereignty of Iraq. The statement underscores the depth of relations that unite Jordan with all Arab countries, the statement read.

In the UAE, Al-Ain media likely reflects Gulf thinking when it reports that the US strikes were part of the rules of engagement and that there was a lot of noise in the strikes, but no major escalation is likely to result.

Iran's statements about the strikes portray the US as ultimately on the losing end of this encounter. Iran believes that, in the long term, the US is slowly withdrawing from the region. It has been read as the policy goal of the Obama, Trump, and Biden administrations.

This likely emboldened Iran and its proxies to go for broke when Hamas attacked Israel on October 7. The degree of Irans involvement in planning that massacre is still unclear, but within days, Iran had mobilized Hezbollah, the Houthis, and militias in Iraq and Syria to carry out attacks.

Therefore, its clear that Iran believed that the October 7 attack was a turning point. This was a crossover point for Iran, beyond which it believes it will increasingly achieve victory in numerous arenas in the region.

Al-Mayadeen media, which is pro-Iran, quotes the Al-Nujaba militia in Iraq as saying they will respond to the US attacks. Hezbollah slammed the US strikes, claiming Washington was escalating the wars in the region. This is ironic, since it is Irans proxies, including Hezbollah and Nujaba, that are responsible for most of the problems in the region. Pro-Iran groups have already claimed to target US forces since the attacks, illustrating they are not deterred.

Iran has shown over the last several years that it can operationalize its militias to carry out hundreds of attacks on US forces in Iraq and Syria and that those militias generally emerge unscathed. In general, the Iranian militias continue to be strengthened, and Iran believes it holds a winning hand.

Iran wants to get political parties in Iraq to demand that the US leave. As such, Iran gets militias in Iraq to target US forces, even in Jordan, and then, when the Americans respond, Iraq claims this is a violation of its sovereignty.

This is a lose-lose situation for the US. If the US responds more strongly, it will be accused of escalating the situation. Iran will then use the escalation as an excuse for more attacks. Iran also uses militias, so it has plausible deniability. Any attacks on Iran itself would be an escalation as well.

The US response to the January 27 attack, like the responses to the Houthi attacks in the Red Sea, has not yet deterred the Iranian-backed groups.

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Iran undeterred by US strikes, as US withdrawing from Middle East - The Jerusalem Post

U.S. Strikes Test Iran’s Will to Escalate – The New York Times

As Iran and the United States assessed the damage done by American airstrikes in Syria and Iraq on Friday, the initiative suddenly shifted to Tehran and its pending decision whether to respond or to take the hit and de-escalate.

The expectation in Washington and among its allies is that the Iranians will choose the latter course, seeing no benefit in getting into a shooting war with a far larger power, with all the risks that implies. But it is not yet clear whether the varied proxy forces that have conducted scores of attacks on American bases and ships and that rely on Iran for money, arms and intelligence will conclude that their interests, too, are served by backing off.

The Houthis, an Iran-backed rebel group that controls parts of Yemen, have continued to attack ships in the Red Sea despite a series of American strikes, including one on Saturday, meant to deter them.

Fridays strikes were largely in retaliation for a drone attack by an Iran-backed militia that killed three American soldiers in Jordan on Jan. 28. The United States hit back at that group and several other Iran-backed militias with 85 targeted strikes. In the aftermath, American officials insisted there was no back-channel discussion with Tehran, no quiet agreement that the United States would not strike directly at Iran.

Theres been no communications with Iran since the attack, John F. Kirby, a spokesman for the National Security Council, told reporters on a call on Friday night after the retaliatory strikes were completed.

But even without direct conversation, there has been plenty of signaling, in both directions.

President Biden is engaged in a military, diplomatic and election-year gamble that he can first restore some semblance of deterrence in the region, then help orchestrate a pause or cease-fire in Gaza to allow for hostage exchanges with Israel and then, in the biggest challenge of all, try to reshape the dynamics of the region.

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U.S. Strikes Test Iran's Will to Escalate - The New York Times

Major US think tank Crisis Group has secret ties to Iran – report – The Jerusalem Post

Prominent Washington think tank the International Crisis Group, influential in the negotiation of the United States nuclear deal with Iran, has extensive but previously undisclosed connections to the Islamic Republics foreign ministry, according to a report from Iran International, a Persian-language news outlet frequently at odds with Irans government, which charges that the theocratic regime has used the experts to lobby the US government on its behalf.

The connections between the Iranian Foreign Ministry and the Crisis Group run through the formers in-house think tank, the Institute for Political and International Studies (IPIS), which Western governments and organizations have largely shied away from since the group sponsored a notorious Holocaust denial conference in 2006.

IPIS and the Crisis Group signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) in 2016, predating much of the latters involvement in negotiations over Irans nuclear program and the lifting of sanctions on the regime.

The think tank has given recommendations to the Obama, Trump, and Biden administrations on Iran, the report says, as well as the US Congress. However, the Crisis Group never made public the agreement it had with the Iranian foreign ministry, and its analysts never mentioned their close ties with the Iranian officials.

In reviewing the large cache of leaked Iranian Foreign Ministry correspondence and Tehrans interactions with Western organizations, wrote Jay Solomon of Semafor, with which Iran International shared the documents, I was startled, not only by its depth, but the lack of transparency involved.

The think tank, however, denies any wrongdoing and maintains that analysts coordination with Irans Foreign Ministry was merely a component in their research and due diligence, as experts who make a point of talking to all parties involved in a given issue before weighing in on it.

In public statements and threads on X, representatives of the Crisis Group think-thank asserted that the Iran International report selectively translated correspondence between the analysts and the Iranian officials, and pointed to a pattern of criticism the think tank has received from the Iranian government and media personalities.

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Major US think tank Crisis Group has secret ties to Iran - report - The Jerusalem Post

Iran Warns U.S. of Threat of Escalation After Strikes on Iran-Backed Targets – The Daily Beast

Iran has lambasted Fridays U.S. strikes on Iran-backed militant resources and facilities in Iraq and Syria, warning that they could lead to significant escalation.

The attack will have no result other than the escalation of tensions and instability in the region, Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Nasser Kanaani said Saturday in a statement. He added that it was a strategic mistake from the Biden administration.

The attack was a violation of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Iraq and Syria, Kanaani said.

Iraqs Popular Mobilization Forces reported 16 of its members had been killed, while 23 were killed in Syria, Reuters reported. Iraq said civilians were also killed in the strikes, Al Jazeera reported.

Although the Biden administration said it informed Baghdad before the strikes, Iraqi government spokesman Basem Al-Awadi said this is an unfounded claim crafted to mislead international public opinion, according to the Iraqi News Agency.

The attack will push the security situation in Iraq and the region to the brink of the abyss, the Iraqi government said.

Iraqs Foreign Ministry said it has summoned David Burger, the U.S. charg daffaires to Baghdad, to protest the strikes.

The alarmed response from the Iranian and Iraqi governments reveals the precarious balancing act the United States must maintain in the coming days in order to avoid further escalation in the region after hitting targets of Irans Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

The strikes, which the Biden administration conducted as a response to the deadly Iran-backed attack on a U.S. outpost in Jordan that killed three American troops, are expected to be the first in a series of responses, the White House said Friday.

There will be additional responses. There will be additional action that we will take, all designed to put an end to these attacks and to take away capability by the IRGC, John Kirby, White House National Security Council coordinator told reporters on a call Friday.

The White House told reporters on Friday the targets were chosen because they were believed to be connected to attacks on U.S. personnel. The Director of Operations of the Joint Staff Lt. Gen. Douglas Sims told reporters that the targets were holding locations for munitions that have been used against U.S. forces and those that helped provide command, control and intelligence collection to the strikes that hit Americans.

The retaliation came after months of Iranian-backed militants conducting hundreds of attacks on U.S. forces in the region. And though the Biden administration killed a leader of an Iran-backed militant group last month and struck out at facilities linked to Kataib Hezbollah, the strikes this week mark a significant escalation in response.

It was not clear if either the Iranian or Iraqi responses in the region or the reported civilian casualties would alter the administrations next steps. The White House, and State Department did not immediately return a request for comment. The Pentagon declined to comment.

U.S. officials said Friday that the Biden administration is not seeking wider war with Iran. The goal here is to get these attacks to stop. We are not looking for a war with Iran, Kirby said.

The White House previously claimed that the attacks were chosen in order to avoid civilian casualties, Kirby said.

These targets were carefully selected to avoid civilian casualties and based on clear, irrefutable evidence that they were connected to attacks on U.S. personnel in the region, Kirby said, acknowledging that the Department of Defense was still in the early stages of assessing the damage.

Sims said that the United States hit exactly what it was intending to hit.

The initial indications were that we hit exactly what we meant to hit with a number of secondary explosions associated with the ammunition and logistics locations, Sims said.

The military struck over 85 targets with over 125 precision-guided munitions. The U.S. military struck seven different facilities overall, Sims told reporters in a call Friday.

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Iran Warns U.S. of Threat of Escalation After Strikes on Iran-Backed Targets - The Daily Beast

How the US and Iran Could End Up in a War They Don’t Want – POLITICO

Neither is Iran, by most accounts. Many Iran experts believe that Khamenei, Irans aging supreme leader, wants to avoid an all-out war and is mainly focused on maintaining political control at home rather than attacking the U.S. In a swift response after Sundays attack, Nasser Kanaani, Irans foreign ministry spokesperson, insisted Tehran was not involved in the decision making of resistance groups.

Iran and the U.S. are already embroiled in a low-level war, despite Tehrans dubious claim that the militants it supplies and trains who are currently attacking American, Israeli and Western targets from Yemen to Syria to Lebanon are acting entirely on their own.

Yet both the U.S. and Iran have left themselves open to a wider conflict that neither side wants.

For America, the Jan. 28 drone strike at an obscure outpost in Jordan a base few Americans knew existed is yet another tragic illustration of the risks of leaving forces forward-deployed around the world, sometimes with no obvious mission. Currently the U.S. has about 2,500 troops in Iraq training the Iraqi military, another 900 in Syria, and a few hundred in Jordan ostensibly to ward off the return of ISIS. Every one of these military personnel is a potential victim who could trigger a future conflict.

For Iran, the U.S. retaliation underway is an illustration of the dangers of running proxy militias on multiple fronts that Tehran may no longer be able to fully direct, if it ever did. While Iran seems to have averted an attack inside its borders for the moment, Biden says hell continue striking back, and Tehran may find that its ultimate fate could be determined by an Iraqi or Syrian militia leader if more Americans die.

For both countries, in other words, events are on a permanent hair trigger that is constantly threatening to explode at the slightest pressure. Bidens secretary of state, Antony Blinken, appeared to acknowledge this this week when he suggested that weve not seen a situation as dangerous as the one were facing now across the region since at least 1973, and arguably even before that.

The problem for Washington goes well beyond Iran and the Middle East. It is whether by pledging to remain the worlds indispensable nation as Biden did in his Oct. 19 Oval Office address the United States is putting itself in jeopardy of imminent war on several fronts at once with no obvious way out.

According to Stephen Wertheim, author of the noted 2020 book, Tomorrow, the World: The Birth of U.S. Global Supremacy, the United States has fecklessly overextended itself in the Middle East, Europe and the Indo-Pacific with no clear strategy at a time when its defense industrial base is ill-prepared and its domestic politics are polarized and often paralyzed. This is causing dissension in both political parties both President Donald Trumps MAGA Republicans and progressive Democrats have raised questions about an overcommitment of U.S. aid abroad.

Wertheim believes that since the end of the Cold War the United States has been far too casual about continuing the role of global policeman, failing to fully appreciate the dangers to U.S. forces as well as the costs, which helped give rise to a populist reaction at home. The United States decided when the costs and risks were low, to scatter its forces all across the world, naively thinking it was the End of History and projecting American power wasnt going to inspire violent reactions, he said.

But such reactions began to erupt, he says, after successive U.S. administrations, both Republican and Democratic, grew overconfident in pressing for NATO expansion toward Russias borders and seeking to remake the Middle East by invading Iraq two decades ago, thus discrediting America as a reliable peacekeeper and helping to provoke Russia and China to go their own ways.

Nothing illustrates this state of strategic confusion more than the outpost that was attacked on Sunday, called Tower 22, which even some experts in national security say they didnt know existed. The several thousand troops collectively stationed in Iraq, Jordan and Syria were left there as remnants of the campaign to defeat ISIS, says Wertheim. But even though ISIS was defeated years ago, and with its defeat came the end of the only verifiably complete mission this troop deployment could have had, the troops remained there as little more than sitting ducks.

Wertheim also warned about the dangers of keeping troops in a region that isnt a focus of administration policy. The Biden administration came into office seeking to deprioritize the Middle East without attempting to disentangle the United States from its extensive security relationships and military positions in the region, he said.

The question of whether the U.S. is overexposed in the region goes back to the disastrous bombing of a Marine barracks in Lebanon in 1983, which killed 241 Americans, in what was considered the first act of terrorism by Hezbollah against the United States. The U.S. forces were deployed at the time as part of a peacekeeping presence to end the Lebanese civil war. But some U.S. leaders, including a newly sworn-in congress member named John McCain, raised questions at the time about whether the troops had no clear mission and were just exposing themselves as targets.

Ryan Crocker, the former U.S. ambassador to Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan, among other places who was political attach in Beirut at the time says the U.S. has recently done a much better job of ensuring U.S. forces are kept to a minimum and deployed for a reason. In the case of Tower 22, he says, that mission is to avoid a repetition of what happened after the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq in 2011, which led to the rise or ISIS.

In terms of the U.S. posture in the region, this is not Beirut 1983, he says. I think we actually did learn from that.

Charles Kupchan, a former official in the Clinton and Obama administrations who teaches at Georgetown University, also argues that the president has already achieved the desired goal of reducing the U.S. footprint in the Middle East all without too much cost.

The United States is no longer fighting land wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria, and thats a good thing, he said. Im not someone who believes we should pack up and go home and leave our air bases and naval bases in the region. That having been said, Im not convinced we also need these forward operating bases in Syria and Jordan. They do expose American forces to these kinds of sporadic attacks.

Its not just the number of troops or where theyre stationed that has added to the tensions. After the Iraq War, Americas strategic exposure in the region grew to enormous proportions: The 2003 invasion revealed U.S. vulnerabilities on the ground to IEDs and now drones, tutoring potential enemies in how to outmaneuver what was once considered an unassailable superpower.

The Iraq invasion also engendered a spate of anti-U.S. militant proxy groups under Irans wing including Kataib Hezbollah, which U.S. officials have named as suspect in the Jan. 28 attack. (The umbrella group its a part of, the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, claimed responsibility.) For years, these groups have been attacking U.S. troops in the region, especially in Iraq. In 2016, a U.S. Army study found that an emboldened and expansionist Iran appears to be the only victor of the Iraq war.

These tensions have grown far greater since the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel that left more than 1,200 Israelis dead, along with an estimated 25,000 Palestinians (according to the Palestinian Health Ministry) in the Israeli retaliation since then. This has triggered almost daily hostilities between Iranian-backed military groups and Western and Israeli forces all over the region, including scores of attacks on U.S. troops in Syria, Iraq and Jordan, albeit without any U.S. deaths until Jan. 28. Meanwhile Houthi rebels in Yemen, who are also supported by Tehran, have been shelling Western shipping in the Red Sea, provoking U.S. retaliation on Houthi command posts.

One big question hanging over this conflict is just how much control Iran exercises over these militant groups.

Some, including hawks who think Biden needs to be more aggressive with Tehran, believe Iran is an active leader of their proxies. Right now, and most likely in the future, its advantage Tehran, Reuel Marc Gerecht, a former CIA official and a Farsi-speaking scholar at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said before Fridays retaliation began. They are willing to encourage and direct their proxies to kill us; we wont kill Iranians in response. This is why the Iranian theocracys proxy-war strategy is so successful: The proxies attack but we never attack Iran directly. A losing hand.

Others, though, like Crocker, the former U.S. ambassador, say the hawks in Washington are constantly overstating Irans control over the various militant groups it aligns itself with.

I think youve got to differentiate between Irans allies; theyre not all proxies, Crocker says. The Houthis have been around as long as Yemen has. And Hamas is about as much an Iranian proxy as the Islamic State is. Theyre Sunni extremists, while the Iranian regime is Shiite. At the same time the Iranians must have assumed that sooner or later some Americans were going to get killed.

Indeed, as the Jan. 28 attack showed, the danger for Iran is that its proxies could go too far and provoke a direct retaliation against Iranian interests. The retaliation operations began Feb. 2, when the U.S. military conducted major airstrikes on 85 targets across seven locations in Iraq and Syria focused on Irans Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) Quds Force and affiliated militia groups, the U.S. Central Command announced. The IRGC is the main sponsor of Irans many proxies.

Facing a reelection challenge only nine months away against a likely opponent, Donald Trump, who accuses him of weakness and surrender, Biden is expected to mount a response that Blinken said would likely be multi-levelled, come in stages and be sustained over time.

If I were an IRGC officer Id be taking my uniform off and getting out of town about now, says Crocker.

The advantage of a proxy strategy [for Iran] is it forces us to hesitate and address escalation. If Iran had attacked U.S. troops directly we wouldnt be hesitating, says C. Anthony Pfaff, a U.S. Army War College scholar and author of the new book, Proxy War Ethics: The Norms of Partnering in Great Power Competition. The problem, however, is if these militias are acting on their own, the Iranians face the peril of getting sucked into a wider war.

In the days since the Jan. 28 drone attack both Tehran and Kataib Hezbollah, appeared to pull back nervously from the brink. Kataib Hezbollah on Tuesday announced it was stopping all attacks on U.S. forces, indicating that it had been pressured to do so by both the Iraqi and Iranian governments. The militants also appeared to absolve Tehran, saying in a statement that our brothers in the axis especially in the Islamic Republic do not know how we work jihad, and they often object to the pressure and escalation against the American occupation forces in Iraq and Syria.

Bidens Republican critics have called the retaliatory strikes thus far too meek, saying the president should emulate Trumps assassination of top Iranian General Qassem Soleimani at Baghdad airport in 2020.

But in fact the Trump administration also proved fairly cautious at the time, reaching out to Tehran afterward to warn against further escalation and its not clear how much of a deterrent the Soleimani strike proved to be. I think the question was whether Soleimani was truly the indispensable leader we thought he was. I agreed with the Trump administration on the desirability of taking him out, says Crocker. But [Irans proxy] structure has since reasserted itself.

Indeed Iran has ever more proxies waiting to go on the attack, and the U.S. has plenty of troops left on the ground for them to target. The risk of a wider war looks at least as serious as its ever been.

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How the US and Iran Could End Up in a War They Don't Want - POLITICO