Showing posts with label #Iraq. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Iraq. Show all posts

Friday, March 27, 2020

In Iraq, coronavirus terrifies even doctors hardened by conflict

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Through decades of conflict, Dr Haidar Hantoush has watched wounded soldiers and civilians flood into Iraq’s emergency wards. But he’s never been so scared.

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Source: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-iraq/in-iraq-coronavirus-terrifies-even-doctors-hardened-by-conflict-idUSKBN21E1VG?feedType=RSS&feedName=worldNews
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Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Snow falls in Baghdad for first time in more than a decade

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This rare phenomenon comes after the country has been rocked by months of protests

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/snow-baghdad-iraq-weather-tahrir-square-protests-a9329976.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Rory Sullivan



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Friday, January 24, 2020

'No, no America': Thousands march in Iraq to demand exit of US forces

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Protests come in response to killing of Iranian general by the US

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iraq-protests-us-troops-moqtada-al-sadr-soleimani-baghdad-a9300256.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Richard Hall



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Friday, January 10, 2020

I watched the Iran-Iraq war unfold as a child – now I feel like I'm reliving it

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What is happening in Iran now is not simply ‘news’ for us in the diaspora – it’s the repetition of decades-old trauma

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/iran-iraq-crisis-missiles-trump-us-soleimani-killing-a9278386.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Shappi Khorsandi



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Wednesday, January 8, 2020

Iran’s supreme leader says missile strike is ‘not enough’

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Iran’s supreme leader on Wednesday warned that an attack by Tehran against military bases in Iraq housing American troops was “not enough” of a punishment for the United States.

“They were slapped last night, but such military actions are not enough,” Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a televised speech in the holy city of Qom. “The corruptive presence of the U.S. in the West Asian region must be stopped.”

Hours earlier, Iran’s Islamist government launched more than a dozen ballistic missiles targeting at least two Iraqi bases in Ain al-Asad and Irbil that were “hosting U.S. military and coalition personnel,” according to the Pentagon.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed responsibility for the assault, which came as a retaliation against the U.S. after President Donald Trump last week ordered the killing of Tehran’s top military commander in an American drone strike.

“The U.S. has caused wars, division, sedition, destruction, and the demolition of infrastructures in this region,” Khamenei said Wednesday. “Of course, they do this everywhere in the world. This region won’t accept the U.S. presence. Governments elected by nations won’t accept the presence of the U.S.”

Despite the supreme leader’s ominous remarks, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif insisted in a tweet Tuesday evening that the Islamic Republic does “not seek escalation or war, but will defend ourselves against any aggression.”

Trump also apparently sought to tamp down the potential for further conflict, tweeting Tuesday that “All is well!” following the Iranian strike and announcing that he would be “making a statement” Wednesday morning.

“Missiles launched from Iran at two military bases located in Iraq. Assessment of casualties & damages taking place now. So far, so good!” the president wrote. “We have the most powerful and well equipped military anywhere in the world, by far!”

Article originally published on POLITICO Magazine

Source: https://www.politico.com/news/2020/01/08/irans-supreme-leader-says-missile-strike-is-not-enough-096116
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The Article Was Written/Published By: qforgey@politico.com (Quint Forgey)



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Sunday, January 5, 2020

Trump threatens Iraq with sanctions “like they’ve never seen before” if it asks U.S. to leave

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President Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One Sunday the U.S. wouldn’t leave the joint U.S. air base with Iraq “unless they pay us back,” and he doubled down on his threat to target 52 Iranian sites.

If they do ask us to leave, if we don’t do it in a very friendly basis. We will charge them sanctions like they’ve never seen before ever. It’ll make Iranian sanctions look somewhat tame.”

Why it matters: Iraq’s parliament passed a resolution earlier Sunday urging the government to expel U.S. troops from the country over the killing of Iranian Gen. Qasem Soleimani and the leader of an Iraqi militia on its soil.

  • Per Axios’ Dave Lawler, the vote does not formally revoke Iraq’s invitation for the U.S. to have a presence in the country, but it is a step along that path.
  • Trump’s threat to attack cultural sites would be considered a war crime under the 1954 Hague treaty.

What he’s saying: “We’ve spent a lot of money in Iraq,” Trump told reporters, according to a pool report.

  • “Iraq, was the worst decision, going into the Middle East was the worst decision ever made in the history of our country … We’re not leaving unless they pay us back for it,” he said of the joint air base.
  • On the targeting of cultural sites, Trump said, “They’re allowed to kill our people. They’re allowed to torture and maim our people; they’re allowed to use roadside bombs and blow up our people. And we’re not allowed to touch their cultural site? It doesn’t work that way.”

Go deeper:

Source: https://www.axios.com/trump-threatens-iraq-iran-sanctions-sites-06abb035-1eaf-42ec-8135-b9f82269529c.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Rebecca Falconer



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Trump officials tried to stop Iraqi parliament from voting to expel U.S. troops

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The Trump administration tried, unsuccessfully, to persuade top Iraqi officials to kill a parliamentary effort to force the U.S. military out of Iraq, according to two U.S. officials and an Iraqi government official familiar with the situation.

Why it matters: The Iraqi parliament passed a resolution today calling on the Iraqi government to expel U.S. troops from Iraq, after the U.S killed Iranian Gen. Qasem Soleimani and a leader of an Iraqi militia with a drone strike near Baghdad airport.


  • This resolution could ultimately lead to the U.S. military being forced out of Iraq. But the outcome remains uncertain, and the prime minister who needs to sign it recently resigned.

“I think it would be inconvenient for us, but it would be catastrophic for Iraq,” said a U.S. official familiar with the Trump administration’s effort to block the vote. “It’s our concern that Iraq would take a short-term decision that would have catastrophic long-term implications for the country and its security.”

  • “But it’s also, what would happen to them financially,” the official added, “if they allowed Iran to take advantage of their economy to such an extent that they would fall under the sanctions that are on Iran?” (Countries can be subject to the sanctions if they engage in certain kinds of trade with Iran.)
  • “We don’t want to see that. We’re trying very hard to work to have that not happen,” the official said.

The United States is disappointed by the action taken today in the Iraqi Council of Representatives,” said State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus.

  • “While we await further clarification on the legal nature and impact of today’s resolution, we strongly urge Iraqi leaders to reconsider the importance of the ongoing economic and security relationship between the two countries and the continued presence of the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS.”
  • “We believe it is in the shared interests of the United States and Iraq to continue fighting ISIS together. This administration remains committed to a sovereign, stable, and prosperous Iraq.”

Behind the scenes: Trump administration officials have warned senior Iraqi officials that Iraq would suffer dangerous consequences if the U.S. withdrew its military and its funding of the Iraqi security apparatus, according to sources familiar with the outreach.

  • On the other hand, Trump has also told advisers he thinks it’s ridiculous that America has been paying billions of dollars to support an Iraqi security apparatus that, in his view, is demonstrably incompetent, disloyal to America and close to Iran.
  • “For the president’s position, he has been very clear about that, and he’s not alone in that thinking,” said a U.S. official. “In terms of developing policy options for him [the president], that’s something we review constantly. What is our assistance to Iraq going to fund?”
  • In the meantime, Trump has sent thousands of troops to the Middle East to counter Iran.

The other side: A senior Iraqi official emphasized that many Kurdish and Sunni members of parliament, who tend to be more supportive of the American presence in Iraq, did not attend the vote to expel the U.S.

  • “This is a temporary victory for the parties which are pro-Iranian,” said the official. “But it’s also a clear message from the Sunnis and from the Kurds [who didn’t vote] and from some Iraqi Shia for the Americans to tell them we want you to stay in Iraq.”

But Abbas Kadhim, who leads the Atlantic Council Iraq Initiative and was a senior adviser to the Iraqi ambassador during the Obama administration, thinks the vote has more serious long-term consequences for the U.S.-Iraq relationship.

  • “If this vote tells us anything, it confirms that if Iraqis are cornered and forced to choose between the U.S. and Iran, they will find it safer to choose Iran,” Kadhim told me. “Military and business relations are completely lost for the foreseeable future.”

The big picture: A U.S. withdrawal from Iraq — something Trump has long wanted but has felt forced to defer — would deeply undercut America’s ability to fight ISIS.

  • “We still have a fairly significant ISIS problem,” said a U.S. official familiar with the planning. “It hasn’t escaped ISIS’ attention that Iraq is in something of disarray right now.” 
  • The U.S.-led coalition in Iraq and Syria has interrupted its anti-ISIS mission as it prepares for Iran to retaliate, military officials told the New York Times.

Go deeper: Anti-ISIS coalition suspends operations due to Iran threat

Source: https://www.axios.com/trump-iraq-parliament-us-troops-vote-iran-11771de3-f3a0-42d9-82fd-10d13dbf76cd.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Jonathan Swan



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Pentagon halts fight against ISIS in Iraq amid new threats to bases

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The U.S. military on Sunday suspended its operations against remaining elements of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria as troops turn their attention to protecting bases in Iraq from strikes by Iran-backed militias.

The move means U.S. troops have paused their training of Iraqi forces to take on ISIS following a U.S. airstrike that killed a top Iranian commander.

“Repeated rocket attacks over the last two months by elements of Kata’ib Hezbollah have caused the death of Iraqi Security Forces personnel and a U.S. civilian,” the headquarters for the estimated 5,000 American troops operating in the country said in a statement.

“As a result we are now fully committed to protecting the Iraqi bases that host Coalition troops. This has limited our capacity to conduct training and to support their operations against Daesh and we have therefore paused these activities, subject to continuous review,” it added, using the Arabic nomenclature for the terrorist group.

Protecting U.S. forces “is our #1 priority. Period,” tweeted Lt. Gen. Pat White, head of Combined Joint Task Force-Operation Inherent Resolve, the command fighting ISIS.

The announcement came just hours after the Iraqi Parliament passed a nonbinding resolution requesting the Iraqi government kick U.S. troops out of the country following the U.S. drone strike on Friday that killed Iranian General Qassem Soleimani, the head of Iran’s Quds Force.

The task force said in its statement today that it hopes it can refocus on defeating the vestiges of the ISIS terrorist group.

“We remain resolute as partners of the Government of Iraq and the Iraqi people that have welcomed us into their country to help defeat ISIS,” its statement added. “We remain ready to return our full attention and efforts back to our shared goal of ensuring the lasting defeat of Daesh.”

Article originally published on POLITICO Magazine

Source: https://www.politico.com/news/2020/01/05/pentagon-halts-fight-isis-iraq-bases-094140
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The Article Was Written/Published By: bbender@politico.com (Bryan Bender)



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'Trump will bear full responsibility': Iraq parliament votes to expel US troops as Iran issues dire warnings to White House

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‘The response will definitely be military and against military sites,’ says Iranian military official

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iran-trump-us-suleimani-troops-rouhani-nuclear-deal-a9271131.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Borzou Daragahi



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Friday, January 3, 2020

US airstrike hits Iran-backed militia hours after targeted killing of Soleimani, say officials

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Iran’s UN ambassador says ‘response a military action is a miltiary action’

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iran-news-war-us-trump-airstrike-iraq-attack-soleimani-latest-a9270001.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Andrew Buncombe



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Everything That Happened in Iran While You Were Sleeping

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The U.S. assassinated a high-ranking Iranian official in a targeted airstrike at Baghdad International Airport in Iraq early Friday, local time. The strike killed Qassem Soleimani, a top Iranian general with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, as well as at least seven other people. And now there’s concern that the…

Read more…

Source: https://gizmodo.com/everything-that-happened-in-iran-while-you-were-sleepin-1840784677
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Thursday, January 2, 2020

Trump takes massive gamble with killing of Iranian commander

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President Donald Trump’s killing of one of Iran’s top military commanders means the elimination of a dangerous U.S. foe – but it also represents a risky escalation in a volatile feud that could backfire on U.S. personnel and allies in the Middle East and beyond.

The Pentagon confirmed Thursday that Qassim Soleimani, who leads Iran’s elite Quds force, was killed in what it termed a “defensive action.” Iraqi and other media said Soleimani died in an airstrike at Baghdad’s international airport. Some media accounts described the airstrike as coming from a U.S. drone, but the Pentagon did not specify.

“At the direction of the president, the U.S. military has taken decisive defensive action to protect U.S. personnel abroad by killing Qasem Soleimani, the head of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds Force, a U.S.-designated Foreign Terrorist Organization,” the Pentagon said.

“General Soleimani was actively developing plans to attack American diplomats and service members in Iraq and throughout the region,” it added, blaming him for recent attacks on U.S. troops and the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. “This strike was aimed at deterring future Iranian attack plans.”

Even the possibility that the U.S. had directly targeted Soleimani – especially on Iraqi soil – sent shockwaves around the globe, spiking oil prices and leading to instant assessments of the potential fallout. U.S. officials have long depicted Soleimani as a paramilitary and terrorist mastermind, deemed responsible for attacks on American troops in Iraq and against U.S. interests all over the world.

“It is hard to overstate the significance,” said retired Gen. David Petraeus, who oversaw the “surge” of American troops in Iraq in the violent years after the 2003 U.S. invasion. “But there will be responses in Iraq and likely Syria and the region.”

Some current and former U.S. officials, as well as veteran Iran observers, said the killing was an escalatory move far beyond what they had ever expected.

“There’s no chance in hell Iran won’t respond,” said Afshon Ostovar, an expert on Soleimani and author of “Vanguard of the Imam” a book about Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

The strike, which also reportedly killed Iraqi militia commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, who was traveling in the same convoy as Soleimani, even astonished some members of the Trump administration who said killing the Iranian general had never been seriously considered.

“I can’t believe it,” one U.S. official said. “The immediate concern for me is: What’s the next step from Iran? Is this the beginning of a regional conflagration?”

A former U.S. official who dealt with the Middle East said the strike was especially notable because it targeted the leader of a state apparatus, as opposed to a non-state actor.

“We need to be prepared that we’re now at war,” he said.

A second Middle Eastern official said that a retaliation by Iran – known for its own assassinations abroad – could occur anywhere.

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“It could be targets in Africa, it could be in Latin America, it could be in the Gulf, it could be anything,” the official said. “I don’t think they’re going to take the assassination of one of their key guys and just turn the other cheek.”

Soleimani had been leading the Quds Force, a unit of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps that is behind much of Iran’s military actions outside its borders. He was a hugely popular figure in Iran, and a frequent rhetorical target of President Donald Trump and his aides.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, for instance, repeatedly singled out Soleimani for criticism as part of the Trump team’s broader anti-Iran “maximum pressure” campaign. Part of that campaign included designating the IRGC as a foreign terrorist organization.

Trump’s “maximum pressure” campaign has intensified in recent months, as the U.S. has clashed with Iran and its proxies. Just days ago, an American contractor died in Iraq after an attack by an Iraqi militia allied with Iran. The U.S. responded by bombing sites held by the group, killing some two dozen militiamen.

Within days, protesters believed to be linked to the Iran-backed militia breached parts of the U.S. Embassy compound in Baghdad. The Iraqi government, meanwhile, condemned the U.S. airstrikes, noting that the militia had ties to its own security forces.

But the death of Soleimani was a shocking development, even considering how tense U.S.-Iran relations have grown under Trump. The president has heaped economic sanctions on Iran’s Islamist regime and at times threatened Tehran with military action.

Trump also pulled the United States out of the internationally negotiated nuclear deal with Iran, saying it was too narrow and should have curbed Iran’s non-nuclear aggressions in the region as well as its nuclear program.

The two countries nearly came to a direct military clash earlier this year after Iran was blamed in a string of attacks on international oil tankers. The U.S. and Iran even downed each other’s drones, but Trump backed down at the last minute from staging a military strike directly on Iran.

Though he has sent thousands more troops to the region, Trump has said repeatedly that he doesn’t want to engage in a new war in the Middle East. But the possibility that Iran will feel compelled to respond with escalatory actions of its own could embroil the president in a politically risky confrontation in the middle of an election year.

Democrats reacted cautiously to Soleimani’s killing, but immediately raised questions about its legality, even as Republicans hailed it as an unalloyed triumph.

“Soleimani was an enemy of the United States. That’s not a question,” tweeted Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.). “The question is this – as reports suggest, did America just assassinate, without any congressional authorization, the second most powerful person in Iran, knowingly setting off a potential massive regional war?”

The death of Soleimani is also likely to have deep implications in Iraq and other countries in the region, where Iran has powerful political allies and proxy forces.

The most immediate shock waves are likely to be felt in Iraq, which for years has been a battleground for influence between Washington and Tehran. One of Iran’s longstanding foreign policy goals has been to push U.S. troops out of Iraq, where they’ve maintained a presence since the 2003 invasion that toppled dictator Saddam Hussein.

Many Iraqis are sick of Iranian influence in their country. Recent widespread demonstrations have featured chants against Tehran and the Shiite clerics who largely run its religion-infused regime.

But Iraq also wants to avoid becoming ground zero for a U.S.-Iran war, while keeping up friendly relations with Iran to help its own economy.

“It is only fair for Iraq to strive to achieve this balance but given the ‘beef’ between Iran and the U.S. it’s a lost effort,” a former Iraqi diplomat told POLITICO. The “Trump administration is on a zero-sum mission vis a vis Iran, and expects Iraq to pick one side only.”

Trump’s hard line toward Iran has earned applause from other Middle Eastern countries, notably Israel, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which consider Iran an implacable enemy bent on manipulating the region in its favor.

Still, Saudi and UAE diplomats in recent months have tried to cool tensions with Iran. And while they’re likely to shed few tears for Soleimani, they may worry about the blowback Iran and its allies are capable of creating in their own countries.

The Pentagon had considered striking Soleimani before, during the height of U.S. involvement in Iraq, when the Quds Force was supplying bombs and other weapons to Iraqi Shiite militia groups that the military estimated killed over 600 U.S. troops.

In 2006, according to an Army study of the Iraq War that was eventually declassified, the U.S. military headquarters in Iraq “prepared a plan to kill or capture Qods Force commander Qassem Soleimani, who had made his way into Iraq for at least the second time” that year, the next time he visited the country.

But U.S. commanders “ultimately refrained from taking action against Soleimani, allowing the Iranian general to enter and exit Iraq unhindered,” says the study. It does not explain why the military did not act on the proposal or whether it was considered at higher levels, such as at the military’s Central Command or the Pentagon.

U.S. commandos in Iraq did detain some of Soleimani’s Quds Force associates during raids later in 2006 and 2007, though, after the Bush administration granted expanded authorities for the elite troops to go after Iranian targets in the country.

Those captures proved controversial with the Iraqi government, which often granted Quds Force members diplomatic immunity and insisted on their release.

While Soleimani’s death is no doubt a major loss for the Iranian regime, it is unlikely the ruling clerics and their military aides were entirely unprepared for it.

Ostovar, the Soleimani and IRGC expert, said in all likelihood Iran will name a successor soon because its systematic approach to their rule is “really strong.”

“He was really just sort of the forward or outside face of the Islamic Republic,” Ostovar said. “He was the face of their strategy, but their strategy goes beyond him.”

Article originally published on POLITICO Magazine

Source: https://www.politico.com/news/2020/01/02/soleimani-trump-iran-iraq-093102
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The Article Was Written/Published By: wmorgan@politico.com (Wesley Morgan)



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Trump impeachment news – live: President attacks 'worse than Watergate' investigations, as White House deploys 4,000 troops after embassy attack

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Follow all the latest developments

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-impeachment-news-live-trial-senate-troops-twitter-today-a9267246.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Adam Forrest



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Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Iraqi protesters withdraw from US Embassy in Baghdad, some defy orders (VIDEOS)

Paramilitary leaders have ordered their supporters to leave the heavily fortified US Embassy compound in Baghdad, Iraq, as American troops reinforced the besieged facility. However, some protesters stayed put.

Live footage from RT’s video agency Ruptly showed protesters with Hezbollah flags withdrawing en masse in their vehicles. It was not immediately clear from the video how many have remained at the scene of clashes, where tear gas and stun grenades were reportedly fired again on Wednesday.

Hordes of protesters descended on Baghdad’s American embassy – located inside the heavily fortified ‘Green Zone’ – on Tuesday. Incensed by Sunday’s US airstrikes against the Kataib Hezbollah militia, the crowd lit fires and pelted the embassy with stones. A contingent of US Marines arrived on Tuesday night to bolster security.

Kataib Hezbollah is an Iranian-backed Shi’ite militia, allied with an umbrella group of similar militias known as the ‘Popular Mobilization Forces’ (PMF), who are supposed to be under the command of the Iraqi military. The PMF on Wednesday told the crowds at the embassy to withdraw, claiming that their “message has been heard,” and to allow the Iraqi government to “preserve the prestige of the state.”

Also on rt.com
Protesters and militia fighters throw back a tear gas canister used by U.S. Embassy security men during a protest to condemn air strikes on bases belonging to Hashd al-Shaabi (paramilitary forces), outside the embassy in Baghdad, Iraq January 1, 2020.US troops fire tear gas as protesters throw stones at embassy in Baghdad – reports

However, the call to pull back has been ignored by a number of the protesters. While some reportedly stood down, a faction of hardliners remained behind.

Washington has blamed Iran for orchestrating the embassy riots, and for directing militias like Kataib Hezbollah to attack its forces in Iraq. Tehran denies all responsibility, with Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei telling Trump that “your crimes in Iraq, Afghanistan… have made nations hate you.”

With the embassy showdown turning into another proxy battle between Iran and the US, Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi has sought to balance relations with both sides. The PM called the US airstrikes a “vicious assault that will have dangerous consequences,” but warned protesters against any aggression towards foreign embassies.

Also on rt.com
American soldiers take position around the US Embassy in Baghdad © US Embassy / Handout via AFPIran’s Supreme Leader hits back at Trump’s ‘big price’ threat, says US ‘took revenge’ for defeating ISIS

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Source: https://www.rt.com/news/477276-protesters-leave-baghdad-embassy/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS
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Thursday, December 5, 2019

Iran secretly moving missiles into Iraq amid mass protests, US says

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Iran ‘using continuing chaos’ to further their weapons arsenal

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iran-iraq-war-protests-trump-us-middle-east-oil-tanker-attack-a9233566.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Eric Schmitt, Julian E. Barnes



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Monday, December 2, 2019

The superpowers battling over Iraq’s giant oil field

Both the US and China are vying for influence in Iraq, and most importantly, to gain control over giant oil fields such as the Qurna-1 field that’s just 50 kilometres away from oil hub Basrah.

Ever since the US signalled through its effective withdrawal from Syria that it now has little interest in becoming involved in military actions in the Middle East, the door has been fully opened to China and Russia to advance their ambitions in the region. For Russia, the Middle East offers a key military pivot from which it can project influence West and East and that it can use to capture and control massive oil and gas flows in both directions as well. For China, the Middle East – and, absolutely vitally, Iran and Iraq – are irreplaceable stepping stones towards Europe for its era-defining ‘One Belt, One Road’ project. Last week an announcement was made by Iraq’s Oil Ministry that highlights each of these factors at play, through a relatively innocuous-sounding contract award to a relatively unknown Chinese firm.

Specifically, it was announced that China Petroleum Engineering & Construction Corp (CPECC) has been awarded a $121 million engineering contract to upgrade the facilities that are used to extract gas during crude oil production at the supergiant West Qurna-1 oilfield in Iraq, 50 kilometres northwest of the principal oil hub of Basra. The project is due to be completed within 27 months and aims to increase the capture of gas currently being flared across the site. Two factors that were not highlighted in the general announcement were firstly that CPECC is a subsidiary of China’s principal political proxy in the oil and gas sector, China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC), and secondly that the gas capture project will also include the development of the oil reserves at West Qurna 1. The current level of oil reserves at West Qurna 1 is just under nine billion barrels but, crucially, the site is part of the overall massive West Qurna reservoir that comprises at least 43 billion barrels of crude oil reserves. “For China, it’s always all about positioning itself so that it is perfectly placed to expand its foothold,” a senior oil and gas industry source who works closely with Iraq’s Oil Ministry told OilPrice.com last week.

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Certainly it makes sense for Iraq to finally begin to monetise its associated gas that it has been burnt off for decades as a product of its burgeoning oil production. Aside from the negative environmental impact of this practice, there is the bizarre practical result that Iraq – which holds some of the biggest oil and gas reserves in the world – has to go to its neighbour Iran every year and beg for electricity imports to plug the huge power deficits that afflict it, particularly during the summer months. As it stands, Iraq has been steadily importing around one third of its total energy supplies from Iran, which equates to around 28 million cubic feet (mcf) of gas to feed its power stations. Even with these extra supplies, frequent daily power outages across Iraq occur and have been a prime catalyst for widespread protests in the past, including last year. The situation is also likely to become worse if change does not occur as, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA), Iraq’s population is growing at a rate of over one million per year, with electricity demand set to double by 2030, reaching about 17.5 gigawatts average.

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Apart from this, burning gas associated with the production of crude oil is costing Iraq billions of dollars in lost revenues. It loses money in the first place because in order to try to minimise power shortages, Iraq is forced to burn crude oil directly at power plants that it could sell in the open market for currently well over $55 per barrel (and the lifting cost per barrel in Iraq is just $2 on average). In this context, the average volume of crude oil used for power generation has fallen in the past two years from a peak of 223,000 barrels per day (bpd) in 2015 but it still averages around 110,000 bpd, or around $2.25 billion per year in value. It costs Iraq money in the second place because this associated gas that is flared could itself either be sold off directly or in LNG form or used as high-quality feedstock to finally truly kick-start the country’s long-stalled petrochemicals industry that itself could generate massive added-value product revenue streams. According to the IEA, Iraq has around 3.5 trillion cubic metres (tcm) of proven reserves of gas – mainly associated – which would be enough to supply nearly 200 years of Iraq’s current consumption of gas, as long as flaring is minimised. It added, though, that proven reserves do not provide an accurate picture of Iraq’s long-term production potential and that the underlying resource base – ultimately recoverable resources – is significantly larger, at 8 tcm or more.

China knows all of this and has come to the correct conclusion that it cannot lose by expanding its imprint in Iraq in such a way. “However, China is now very wary of being seen in Iran or Iraq as looking to make them into client states, although that’s what it plans for both, so it’s recalibrated its approach to being more of the stealth variety – that is, small, incremental steps but lots of them – until at one point in the future the governments [of Iran and Iraq] look around and wonder how China is calling all the shots all of a sudden,” said the Iraq source. Such is the case in West Qurna 1 in which, although the contract announced principally involves CPECC just building the infrastructure to capture gas rather than flare it, in reality also involves being allowed to take and use or sell the gas at an advantageous rate. “China is looking at taking the gas with a discount of at least 30 percent to the lowest mean one-year average market price at the hubs [principal gas hub pricing in Europe], and this then allows China to get more involved in the oil as well,” he added. China certainly has the expertise for this – and the appetite – as it has put on hold for a while at least its plans to take over the development of Phase 11 of Iran’s supergiant South Pars gas field.

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This large foothold in West Qurna 1 will very neatly fit in with China’s near-identical move just a couple of months ago in Iraq’s massive Majnoon oil field. It is this field that was the focus of the extremely similar announcement that two major new drilling contracts had been signed: one with China’s Hilong Oil Service & Engineering Company to drill 80 wells at a cost of $54 million and the other with the Iraq Drilling Company to drill 43 wells at a cost of $255 million. In reality, it will be China that is in charge of both, having given the funds required to the Iraq Drilling Company as a ‘fee’ for its own participation, according to the Iraq source. Also located very close to Basra – around 60 kilometres to the north-east – the supergiant Majnoon oilfield is one of the world’s largest, holding an estimated 38 billion barrels of oil in place. It is currently producing around 240,000 bpd. Longer term, though, the original production tar­get figures for the Shell-led consortium still stand: the first production target of 175,000 bpd (already reached), and the plateau production for the site of 1.8 million bpd at some point in the 2030s. West Qurna 1, in the meantime, is producing around 465,000 bpd, with an original plateau target of 2.825 million bpd having been re-negotiated down, to 1.6 million bpd again by some point in the 2030s.

The deal for the oil that China ends up extracting from West Qurna 1 will be: “Absolutely in line with the deal it has for Majnoon,” the Iraq source told OilPrice.com last week. Specifically, this will involve a 25-year contract but – critically – one that would only officially start two years after the signing date (yet to be determined), so allowing CNPC to recoup more profits on average per year and less upfront investment. The per barrel payments to China will be the higher of either the mean average of the 18 month spot price for crude oil produced, or the past six months’ mean average price. It will also involve at least a 10 percent discount to China for at least five years on the value of the oil it recovers, in addition to the aforementioned 30 percent discount for the gas it captures.

This article was originally published on Oilprice.com

Source: https://www.rt.com/business/474815-superpowers-battling-over-iraq-oil/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS
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Friday, November 29, 2019

Why the resignation of Iraq's prime minister will not automatically stop the mass uprising on the horizon

iraq-protests.jpg

He had proved ineffectual leader and the entire ruling elite in Iraq is probably too corrupt and too determined to hang onto power to make the radical reforms demanded by the protesters

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/iraq-prime-minister-resign-adel-abdul-mahdi-protests-replacement-a9226691.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Patrick Cockburn



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Saturday, November 23, 2019

Women in Iraq defiantly take to the streets despite fears they 'could die at any moment'

iraq.jpg

Female activists speak to Pesha Magid in Baghdad about why there are more women protesting than ever before

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iraq-protests-women-streets-death-torture-revolution-tahir-square-a9213976.html
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Sunday, October 13, 2019

Like the US before it, Iran is learning the perils of foreign intervention in Iraq

Baghdad-protest.jpg

America has learned and relearned its lesson the hard way several times over the last 50 years, now it’s time for another nation to get a taste of its own medicine

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/trump-syria-turkey-kurds-iraq-sunni-iran-libya-a9154096.html
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Sunday, October 6, 2019

Baghdad denies firing at protesters after graphic videos of shot Iraqi demonstrators go viral

Iraqi officials have insisted that government forces did not fire directly at protesters during a brutal crackdown on anti-government demonstrations which has left at least 104 people dead and thousands more injured.

Security forces have repeatedly used live ammunition in a bid to clamp down on the wave of protests that have swept across Iraq this week. However, Interior Ministry spokesman Major General Saad Maan insisted on Sunday that government forces did not shoot directly at protesting civilians.

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In a news conference broadcast on state television, Maan said that eight members of the security forces died in the violent clashes and dozens of public buildings and political party headquarters had been torched by protesters.

Several videos of wounded and distressed protesters have been widely shared on social media as the violence continued throughout the week.

Earlier Sunday, the government announced 17 planned reforms in response to the mass demonstrations which represent the biggest challenge Prime Minister Adel Abdel Mahdi has faced since coming to power last year. 

The reforms cover areas such as land distribution, welfare stipends and a bid to tackle youth unemployment which currently stands at 25 percent.

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A protester gestures as he stands next to burning tires in Baghdad © Reuters / Thaier al-SudaniPolice & protesters clash in Iraq, as rallies against corruption and unemployment spread nationwide

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Source: https://www.rt.com/news/470327-iraq-denies-shooting-protesters/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS
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