Soleimani’s
Murder: It Is Building Upto A Terrible Crescendo In West Asia
Saeed Naqvi
The assassination of Major General
Qassem Soleimani by US airstrikes in Iraq, brings West Asia nearer the precipice.
By this action, President Trump, who cannot get out of Afghanistan, has got
himself deeper into the West Asian Quagmire. Americans know power and strategy.
They don’t understand a quantity called the people. This gap in their make up
has been their undoing in every outing since Vietnam.
Soleimani was the author of growing
Iranian influence in the region – Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen. In Iraq, he
was supported by Hashd al Shaabi and Kataib Hezbullah. Their leaders were
iconic figures too. Soleimani was a regional hero in not only helping defeat
Daesh (ISIS), Al Qaeda and Jabhat al Nusra, but also placing the US, Israeli,
Saudi combine on the defensive. He did this by building local forces in all the
countries under his influence. He had paid special attention to Iraq, particularly
after the appearance of the Islamic State in Mosul in 2014, from where it began
to hurtle down towards Baghdad with the explicit purpose of affecting regime
change in the Iraqi capital. This, in effect, meant the removal of Prime
Minister, Nouri al Maliki whom the Americans labeled as a “fundamentalist” who
was augmenting Shia influence in Iraq at the expense of Sunnis who, though a
minority, wielded great influence as Saddam Hussain’s Ba’athist Revolutionary
Guards, Army, Intelligence and bureaucracy.
After the occupation of Iraq by the US
in April 2003, a section of the Americans toyed with the idea of pampering the
Ba’athists into supporting the occupation. But Iraqi “operators” (call them
leaders if you must) like Ahmed Chalabi, close to the Dick Cheney-Donald
Rumsfeld, neo cons, persuaded them to another course – that of disbanding the
Ba’athist structure lock-stock-barrel. This was honeyed music to the clergy in
Najaf. Chalabi became extremely close to the group around Grand Ayatollah Ali
Sistani. Please note, Cheney’s advisers becoming the eyes and ears of the Najaf
clergy.
The first US representative, Paul Bremer
became the succour who removed every Ba’athist from every nook and corner of
the administration. The result was unspeakable chaos which neither the
Americans nor the weak governments in Baghdad have been able to control to this
day.
Many of the Iraqi Ba’athists moved to
Syria where their Ba’athist cousins welcomed them. The CIA not only sought them
out but also nursed them. When Nouri al Maliki flexed his muscles and refused
to sign the Status of Forces Agreement in 2011, the US sulked out. Iraqi Ba’athists
in Syria, looking for work and plotting plots, came in handy as the backbone of
what came to be known as the Islamic State.
How does an outfit, which hides in
trenches, war ravaged houses, produce a smart news website called Amaq. It frequently
produces a glossy magazine too. A terror group, on the run, with such facilities
at its command?
Hints on Daesh’s origins have been available
from the very beginning. When it hurtled towards Baghdad in convoys of brand
new Humvees, its soldiers in new uniforms, helpers in Nike shoes, every Arab
ambassador, except for those representing the GCC Sheikhdoms, was on record
that Daesh was an American creation. When CNN’s Christiane Amanpour asked Russian
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov if he suspected the US hand in the terrorism
till, he answered in the affirmative. President Barack Obama, in the course of
a 2014 interview with the New York Time’s Thomas Friedman, all but accepted
that Daesh was an asset. Asked why he did not bomb Daesh when it first reared
its head in Mosul, Obama replied that immediate air strikes would have taken
the pressure off Nouri al Maliki. In other words, the Daesh was not bombed out
of existence, because it was required to exert pressure on the Shia Prime
Ministers whom the US hated.
Why, Trump himself told CNN’s Jake
Tapper that he was convinced that Obama and Hillary Clinton had been
responsible for wasting millions of dollars in helping set up terror groups in
Syria and Iraq. I can never forget the face of Defence Secretary Ashton Carter,
in a distinctly lower mould, virtually in tears while being grilled by the Senate
Foreign Affairs Committee on the state of play in Syria. Carter admitted that a
$500 million dollar project to train militants had been withdrawn because those
trained had passed on lethal equipment to other militants and left for heaven
knows where.
Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei’s allegation cannot be easily dismissed: the US was taking revenge
against Iraqi militia Hashd al Shaabi “because they played a key role in
defeating Daesh”. Khamenei has consistently maintained that the US had “created
and nurtured Daesh”.
Indeed, Khamenei told a Friday prayer
congregation in Tehran in 2018 that Daesh groups were being flown to northern
Afghanistan. Earlier that month Russian Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Morgulov
Igor Vladimirovich told a high powered seminar in New Delhi that militants were
being flown from Syria to Afghanistan. “Only Americans and the Afghan
government controls the country’s air space”, he said rhetorically.
Iraq is something of an obsession with
the US establishment because it has not been able to extract advantage
consistent with nearly 15 year old occupation and investment in blood and
treasure.
Matters have been building upto a
crescendo eversince the Iraqis opened the land route to Syria which gives Iran
a clear passage via Iraq to Syria and Lebanon. This adds to the way an officer
like Soleimani was able to turn the tables on Washington, Tel Aviv, Riyadh who
thought the Shia-Sunni faultline would work to their advantage. Quite the
opposite has happened.
Déjà vu – some would say. On December
17, 1998 President Clinton had launched attacks on Iraq. That impeachment vote
was delayed. Are Trump’s circumstances similar?
American air strikes against bases of
Iraqi militias invited a peoples’ invasion of the US embassy. What will be the
retaliation to Soleimani’s murder? Only time will tell.
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