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U.S. Demands Iraq Either Join U.S. War Against Iran or Be Destroyed

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of this site. This site does not give financial, investment or medical advice.

Eric Zuesse, originally posted at The Saker

U.S. officials have now made clear that if U.S. forces become removed from Iraq as Iraq’s Parliament unanimously demanded and Iraq’s Prime Minister affirmed on January 5th, then the U.S. will try to break Iraq up into separate Sunni and Shia nations, and will also definitely impose sanctions against Iraq or (if Iraq becomes successfully broken up) against the Shia-governed portion of Iraq, in order to destroy Iraq (or the Shiite regions in Iraq) totally.

The U.S. is determined to separate both Lebanon and Syria (both of which are supported by Shia Iran) from Iran so that Iran will become internationally isolated unless and until Iran again becomes controlled by the U.S. Government as it was during the period from 1953 when U.S. imposed the Shah’s dictatorship there, till 1979, when Iranians finally took back control over their country and kicked out the U.S.-and-allied foreign oil companies.

By far the best international journalism about the situation today regarding Iraq has come from the Middle East Eye, which headlined on January 23rd, “US seeking to carve out Sunni state as its influence in Iraq wanes”, and sub-headed, “With Shia parties pressuring American troops to leave, Washington wants to create an autonomous region around Anbar to maintain its presence.” Their reporter in Baghdad, Suadad al-Salhy, stated that,

Backed into a corner and influence waning, the United States has in recent weeks been promoting a plan to create an autonomous Sunni region in western Iraq, officials from both countries told Middle East Eye.

The US efforts, the officials say, come in response to Shia Iraqi parties’ attempts to expel American troops from their country.

Iraq represents a strategic land bridge between Iran and its allies in Syria, Lebanon and Palestine.

Establishing a US-controlled Sunni buffer zone in western Iraq would deprive Iran of using land routes into Syria and prevent it from reaching the eastern shores of the Mediterranean.

For Washington, the idea of carving out a Sunni region dates back to a 2007 proposition by Joe Biden, who is now vying to be the Democratic Party’s presidential candidate. …

“The creation of a Sunni region has always been an option for the US. The Iranians cannot be allowed to reach the Mediterranean Sea or benefit from the land bridge connecting them to Hezbollah” in Lebanon, the former US official told MEE.

“The project is American, not Sunni. The presence of the American forces has been the guarantor for the Sunnis and the Kurds, so if the US has to leave Iraq, then establishing a Sunni region in western Iraq is its plan to curb Iran and its arms in the Middle East,” he added.

“We are talking about establishing a country, not an administrative region.” …

The Arab Gulf states allied to US, led by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, support and finance this project, Sunni and Shia leaders and officials told MEE.

“Funding is in place, international pressure is in place, and the necessary military strength is in place to create this region,” a prominent Sunni leader familiar with the talks said.

“Neither Iran nor the Shia forces will be able to stand against the project because the US and Gulf states back it,” the leader added.

“A huge amount of money and investment offered by the Sunni states is at stake, and these will turn the Anbar desert into green oases and rebuild the destroyed areas in Mosul and Salah al-Din. Who will care about oil?”

This is a war by U.S., Saudi Arabia, the other Arab oil monarchies, and Israel, against Iran, and it will become also a U.S.-v.-Russia war unless Russia complies with America’s demand to stay out, and not to defend Iran.

Anbar Province is one of two places where the fanatical Sunni ISIS was located in Iraq, the other being the city of Mosul directly to the north of Anbar. Both areas are so heavily Sunni so that in order for Iraq’s mainly Shiite government to become able to wage an effective war against ISIS in Iraq, it first had to convince Anbar’s residents that this would be something which would benefit all of Iraq and not only Shiites in Iraq. Fallujah and Ramadi, two cities where Iraq’s Government were especially trying to defeat ISIS   in 2014, are in Anbar Province. Until 2015, Iranian General Soleimani’s forces (all of them Shiites) were virtually the only effective forces trying to exterminate ISIS; and therefore, Iraq’s Government had to emphasize that killing ISIS was a patriotic, not a sectarian, matter. On 17 September 2016 U.S. President Obama bombed Syria’s army in the heart of Syria’s oil-producing region, the city Deir Ezzor, for Syria’s ISIS to move in and take Syria’s oil. During October through December 2016, two of Syria’s main enemies, Obama, and Turkey’s leader Erdogan, established a system to reinforce ISIS in Deir Ezzor, by supplying them ISIS fighters fleeiing from Mosul in Iraq’s north. On 11 December 2016, I headlined “Obama & Erdogan Move ISIS from Iraq to Syria, to Weaken Assad”, and reported that the U.S. and Turkey were offering a deal to fighters for ISIS in Mosul, a way to stay alive but not in Iraq. They would relocate west into Syria, so as to assist the U.S. and its allies to overthrow, or at least seize territory from, Syria’s Government. America’s war against Syria used basically three proxy-forces as boots-on-the-ground: Al Qaeda, ISIS, and Kurds — all three being Sunnis. The Sauds provided most of the funding for it, because the goal was to place Syria under the control of the Sauds. And the U.S. sticks by that goal. No matter how much the people in Syria oppose it. It’s not only Trump who is obsessed with this goal; Obama was, though he wasn’t as obsessed with destroying Iran as Trump is.

On January 24th, Middle East Eye’s Washington reporter Ali Harb headlined “At what point do US troops in Iraq become an occupation force?” and he took the most literalist approach possible to this question, in which the obvious answer should be “as soon as we invaded and occupied the country on 20 March 2003.” He got an answer from the U.S. Government, saying that “diplomatic notes, which are not public, remain the legal basis for the presence of about 5,000 American soldiers in Iraq today” and that “the letters contain a provision that gives US forces one year to withdraw after they are formally asked by Baghdad to leave.” So: if this U.S. Government, which has become infamous for violating its contracts (such as the Iran nuclear agreement and the Paris Climate Agreement), alleges that it can stay in Iraq for another year and yet still remain within the bounds of those “diplomatic notes, which are not public” — and which a supplicant Iraqi Government had allegedly consented to in 2014 — then Iraq’s Government will need to wait until 5 January 2021 before accusing the U.S. Government of violating that secret and coerced “1-year cancellation clause.” And, if Iraq’s Government is, at that time, still insisting that U.S. terminate its occupation of Iraq, then, Joe Biden’s 2007 plan will start being implemented, to break Iraq into its Shiite Arab southeast (friendly toward Iran), Sunni Kurd northeast (backed by U.S.), and Sunni Arab southwestern desert half of Iraq’s expanse (hostile toward Iran). There would be no more land-connection between Iran to Iraq’s east and Syria to Iraq’s west. For Iran, that would be like cutting off its two arms. Furthermore, Ali Harb noted that the Obama-Trump Administrations’ Pentagon official Brett McGurk said that “If the U.S. leaves Iraq, it means NATO, 20 western partners also leave.” McGurk was suggesting that Iraq without U.S. would become then again a U.S. enemy. The U.S. regime is determined to destroy, one by one, each country that tries to block U.S.-and-allied billionaires from taking them over. Here are two maps of Iraq, which show what trisecting Iraq would mean:

https://www.stratejikortak.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/iraq-etnik-haritasi.png

https://i1.wp.com/transnational.live/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/iraq-map.gif 

So: Syria would be surrounded by U.S. allies.

According to MEE’s Suadad al-Salhy in Baghdad,

Leaders familiar with the ongoing talks on partitioning Iraq said that Sunni politicians are seriously involved in the discussions and are waiting to see the demonstrations’ outcome before deciding on their path.

“The meetings are taking place in full swing, and all the Sunni leaders are attending. But they deny this publicly, waiting for the conditions that protect them,” a prominent Sunni leader familiar with the talks told MEE.

If the protesters are able to force through a national government that takes care of all Iraqi communities, then the Sunnis will reject any planned autonomous area, the leader said.

Failure to achieve this, he warned, would see Sunnis supporting the partition project en masse.

“Sunnis do not want to be part of the Shia crescent, and refuse to submit to Iranian control. So they will offer the Americans permission to build military bases in their lands, in exchange for the necessary support to establish the desired region.”

The Atlantic Council is NATO’s main PR organization. Ali Harb reported:

“We’re not at a point where the US and Iraq are enemies,” said Abbas Kadhim, director of the Iraq Initiative at the Atlantic Center think-tank in Washington. …

Kadhim, of the Atlantic Council, called for negotiating an American military withdrawal from Iraq in a way that would ease the tensions of the past few weeks and preserve the strategic partnership between Washington and Baghdad. …

Kadhim said the “knee-jerk reactions” that Baghdad and Washington have been displaying are not helpful.

“At the end of the day, the United States cannot impose its troops on Iraq. There’s no justification for keeping troops in Iraq against the will of the Iraqi people, and it’s not in the interest of the United States to do that,” he told MEE. …

The US envoy for the Coalition against IS, James Jeffery, … also issued an implicit warning to Baghdad on Thursday [Jan. 23].

At a news conference, he said that if the US and Iraq were to negotiate a troop withdrawal, everything else would be on the table, including Washington’s diplomatic support to Baghdad.

“We’re not interested in sitting down and talking only about withdrawal,” Jeffery said.

“Any conversations that the Iraqis want to have with us about the United States in Iraq, we believe should and must cover the entire gamut of our relationship, which goes way beyond our forces, goes way beyond security.”

Kadhim said imposing sanctions on Iraq would be harmful to both nations and counterproductive to Washington’s stated aim of reducing Iranian influence in Baghdad.

—————

Investigative historian Eric Zuesse is the author, most recently, of  They’re Not Even Close: The Democratic vs. Republican Economic Records, 1910-2010, and of  CHRIST’S VENTRILOQUISTS: The Event that Created Christianity.

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The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of this site. This site does not give financial, investment or medical advice.

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oldandjaded
January 29, 2020

I have many close friends that are Sunni and Shia, this idea is pure fantasy, there is no existential hatred between mainstream Sunni and Shia muslims, this idea that there is some deep rift that the west can exploit is largely a fantasy. The radical Islamists constitute a TINY FRINGE of Islamic society. This is a mirror vision of the trope that was trotted out in the nineties in the US, that there was a radical right-wing militia preparing to overthrow the US government. Total bullshit, and the conservative shia side has suffered a devastating blow with the death of… Read more »

Thraxite
Thraxite
Reply to  oldandjaded
January 29, 2020

You’re right, the author seems to be totally ignorant that most of Syrias’ defense forces are Sunni and are quite content to be battling terrorism with their Shia, Christian and Alawite comrades. This all seems like a pipe dream and is one of the extreme outcomes that may come forth from all the wrangling going on in the M.E. at the moment, but I don’t think Sunnis’ see the US as any different than the Shia do. It is the US who is responsible for lack of utilities and infrastructure 15 years after the illegal invasion that lowered every-bodies standard… Read more »

oldandjaded
Reply to  Thraxite
January 29, 2020

dead on the money. They recognize the US as the common enemy, and really see themselves as having ZERO reason to fight among themselves. Its possible my view may be slightly skewed, as I am in Canada, so the Muslims I meet are predominately white collar professionals, but they are telling me what they are seeing on the ground with everyday people in Iraq, Iran and Saudi Arabia.

MEHRNAZ SHAHABI
MEHRNAZ SHAHABI
Reply to  oldandjaded
January 29, 2020

It is wrong to describe Soleimani and by the same token Al-Muhandis, and Popular Mobilisation Forces (Hashd-al-Sha’abi) as “conservative shia” and that Soleimani’s death has undermined Khamenei’s power base in Iran. Although Soleimani and Al-Muhandis were devout Shia, as evident from the composition of Hashd-Al-Sha’abi), which included Christian, Sunni and Yazidi Iraqis, their struggle was not sectarian, it was rather anti-ISIS and anti US occupation, or anti-imperialist. It is also a misreading of the situation that the power base of Khamenei has been undermined! Did you see the millions strong funeral processions in Iran? Were they the conservative Shia mourning… Read more »

oldandjaded
Reply to  MEHRNAZ SHAHABI
January 29, 2020

sorry, but I don’t see how any of what you have said here contradicts anything I said about Soleimani, except the part about weakening Khamenei, and I think you are either kidding yourself on that, or more likely, being disingenuous. Your position is “He cant be conservative Shia, because he’s anti-imperialist”. You are suggesting that conservative Shia are de-facto pro-imperialism, I’m sorry, but there is no way in hell I am even REMOTELY buying THAT. It seems to me what has really upset you is I have said suggests about Soleimani’s assassination, and who gains by it, which is the… Read more »

oldandjaded
Reply to  oldandjaded
January 29, 2020

Sorry “Erics piece suggests the OPPOSITE, that Shia are pro-imperialist.” should read “Erics piece suggests the OPPOSITE, that Sunni are pro-imperialist.” but time ran out while I was editing.

oldandjaded
Reply to  oldandjaded
January 29, 2020

If you want detachment (which is the ONLY clear-headed way to analyze events) you have to look to stories that were done BEFORE Soleimani became a martyr.
https://www.thenational.ae/opinion/comment/meet-the-the-real-leader-in-iran-ali-khamenei-towers-above-all-1.918964

https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/military-coup-iran-180424144510759.html

oldandjaded
Reply to  Eric Zuesse
January 29, 2020

I never even questioned whether they were “interested in sitting down and talking only about withdrawal”, you are countering my very valid argument with a straw man. I stated very clearly and specifically what part of your narrative is BS, I will quote it.
“there is no existential hatred between mainstream Sunni and Shia muslims, this idea that there is some deep rift that the west can exploit is largely a fantasy.”
If you want to challenge that, fine, have at it, but don’t throw up straw men.

Except......
Except......
Reply to  oldandjaded
January 29, 2020

Yeah, but it’s the US (and its partners in crime) that always look to empower the radicals to their own end, be they (to name just two) radical head-chopping jihadis or child-killing ukie neonazis, it’s in their foreign policy blood.

BobValdez
BobValdez
January 29, 2020

It’s time for the Sunni and Shia Cresent to unite under one banner and rid the Middle East of the Saud family and the seppo desease. Time to unite and free your people and decide your own fate.

cudwieser
cudwieser
January 29, 2020

Iraq has been bullied long enough. It’s do or die (if you believe the US) so they might as well go with the devils they know, Iran.

oldandjaded
Reply to  cudwieser
January 29, 2020

And if push comes to shove, they will. And the Saudis will not be the US’s proxy in a ground war with Iran, this is a neo-con fantasy as well. Although the US hasn’t pushed this trope in a couple years now, I think even THEY now realize this one was a non-starter from the beginning.

Mehrnaz Shahabi
Mehrnaz Shahabi
January 29, 2020

With all the good intentions and good understanding of the events in the region, the main flaw running through the analysis is the sectarian prism through which movements, alliances and events are labelled.

oldandjaded
Reply to  Mehrnaz Shahabi
January 29, 2020

Geez Mehrnaz, that sounds a hell of a lot like you are fundamentally in agreement with me….

Tahir
Tahir
January 29, 2020

The World has been isolated into two big and conspicuous Side one comprises The truth and reality and the other includes Devil and extremist.,.
The former side is governed by Iran- Shia dominated Islamic country and the latter side is ruled by The US- internationally recognized Terrorist and extremism promoter and financer….. Hence the US scrambles to overthrow Iran as It is the only Nation that will definitely level US domination over the world and press on its ideological struggle of battling Evils and supporting downtrodden and underdog people in the world…

Good Grief
Good Grief
January 29, 2020

First they empower the Shi’a, then they demand that they turn on Iran in some pipe dream. Does anyone in Washington ever know what in hell they’re doing?

Helen B
January 30, 2020

I keep wondering at what point the rest of the world is going to tire of the US’ machinations, subterfuges and theft and say “enough”.
Haven’t enough men, women and children died because of this unconscionable mafia gang?

Vera Gottlieb
Vera Gottlieb
January 30, 2020

Stop the hate and war mongering. Iran has never attacked another country. Same can’t be said for the USofA.

Talal Yafi
Talal Yafi
January 30, 2020

Irak is already destroyed, oil stolen and is still being stollen. They will be kicked out anyway

Alex
Alex
March 16, 2020

Some Fake News injected in this, like they all do. “until Iran again becomes controlled by the U.S. Government as it was during the period from 1953 when U.S. imposed the Shah’s dictatorship there, till 1979, when Iranians finally took back control over their country and kicked out the U.S.-and-allied foreign oil companies.” = Fake News. The US did not impose the Shah who was king from 1941, the Shah did not have or use absolute power to be a dictatorship, 1979 was a French, UK & USA backed Coup involved in Using NGO’s in velvet coup methods & then… Read more »

Smoking Eagle
Smoking Eagle
Reply to  Alex
March 17, 2020

RE “…the Shah did not have or use absolute power to be a dictatorship, 1979 was a French, UK & USA backed Coup involved in Using NGO’s in velvet coup methods & then brutally imposing muslim radicals against the people of Iran, after the Shahs Government had successfully broken free of & ended US & UK Hegemony against Iran. The Shah was murdered by US Doctors for this after he was Couped.” This is incorrect. I KNOW it to be wrong because I was teaching at the university level in Iran in 1978 and 1979 and witnessed the steadily building… Read more »

S Conroy
S Conroy
Reply to  Alex
March 17, 2020

There’s a good book on the subject of US meddling called All the Shah’s Men.
The book discusses the 1953 Iranian coup d’état backed by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in which Mohammed Mossadegh, Iran’s democratically elected prime minister, was overthrown by Islamists supported by American and British agents (chief among them Kermit Roosevelt) and royalists loyal to Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.

lobro
March 18, 2020

Like all vampires, Yinon plan rises from its coffin thirsting for more blood. The only way to get rid of it is a solid stake through the heart, burn the putrid remains.
But under the new official religion of Satanism, harming monsters is the ultimate crime.

J. Bel
J. Bel
March 21, 2020

There is one party in all this which can never be trusted and I am sure you guess which one,
USA.

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