Trump’s Brink of War with
Iran Spun on a Lie
February
9, 2020
Iraqi military intelligence
has found that almost certainly the rocket attack on a U.S. base in December
which killed an American contractor was carried out by the Islamic State terror
group – not an Iranian-backed Shia militia, contrary to what Washington has
been claiming.
The rocket attack on the
base in Kirkuk in northern Iraq on December 27 led to a spiral of violence
which brought the U.S. to the brink of war with Iran last month. For a few
days, the world held its breath in dread of a war which could have engulfed the
entire Middle East and beyond.
It turns out that President
Trump’s brink of war with Iran was most likely spun on a cynical lie. That
misinformation also led to the U.S. assassination of top Iranian military
leader, Major General Qassem Soleimani on January 3, and to the subsequent
shoot-down of a civilian airliner in Iran with 176 lives lost.
Following the deadly barrage
on the American base in Kirkuk on December 27, the U.S. immediately blamed the
Iranian-backed militia called Khataib Hezbollah. Washington took revenge within
days by launching airstrikes on December 29 against the militia at sites across
Syria and Iraq, killing dozens of fighters.
That then prompted furious
protests at the U.S. embassy in the Iraqi capital Baghdad on January 1. Trump
fulminated against Iran for orchestrating the assault on American personnel and
property, warning of a devastating military response.
On January 3, Trump ordered
a drone strike against Iran’s Maj. Gen. Soleimani after he arrived at Baghdad
international airport. Soleimani was murdered along with Iraqi commander Abu
Mahdi al Muhandis who was leader of Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Forces, which
includes Khataib Hezbollah – the Shia group that the Americans blamed for the
multiple-rocket attack killing the U.S. contractor on December 27 in Kirkuk.
There then followed an
intensive media campaign by Trump and his top officials which sought to portray
the Iranian general as the ultimate author of the December 27 rocket attack.
Soleimani was overnight transformed into a monster-terrorist who had to be
“taken out”.
In his State of the Union
address last week, Trump repeated the vilification of Soleimani and the
justification for his assassination.
The president stated: “Soleimani was the Iranian regime’s most ruthless
butcher, a monster who murdered or wounded thousands of American service
members in Iraq. As the world’s top terrorist, Soleimani orchestrated the
deaths of countless men, women, and children. He directed the December assault
[at Kirkuk U.S. base] and went on to assault U.S. forces in Iraq. Was actively
planning new attacks when we hit him very hard. And that’s why, last month, at
my direction, the U.S. military executed a flawless precision strike that killed
Soleimani and terminated his evil reign of terror forever.”
Neither Trump nor his senior
administration officials have presented any evidence to link Soleimani with the
rocket attack at Kirkuk. Nor have they provided evidence that the Khataib
Hezbollah militia group were responsible. The Americans say their information
is classified and therefore cannot be disclosed publicly. For its part, the
militia group has denied any involvement.
Iraqi military officials,
however, are now coming out to say that they believe the perpetrators of the
Kirkuk attack were Islamic State (also known as Daesh). The New York Times last
week quoted Iraq’s Brigadier General Ahmed Adnan as saying:
“All the indications are that it was Daesh… We as Iraqi forces cannot even come
to this area unless we have a large force because it is not secure. How could
it be that someone [Khataib Hezbollah] who doesn’t know the area could come here
and find that firing position and launch an attack?”
The area surrounding the
U.S.-Iraqi base in Kirkuk is a hotbed for the radical Sunni Islamic State
network. It would therefore be nigh impossible for a Shia militia like Khataib
Hezbollah to mount a major operation in a hostile and remote northern area of
the country.
Furthermore, the Iraqi
military said it had notified the Americans of imminent Islamic State hostile
activity in the Kirkuk area in the weeks before the attack on December 27.
That points to another
anomaly in Trump’s State of the Union speech when he bragged about how he had
achieved the “100 per cent” destruction of the IS terror organization in Iraq
and Syria. Trump’s bravura necessarily means denying that the terror group
could have killed an American contractor. Better to blame a Shia militia
affiliated with Iran so as not to spoil the self-congratulations.
More than that though, it
seems that the Trump administration had Iran’s military leader in its
cross-hairs for months before he was finally assassinated. It is reported Trump wanted to kill Soleimani as far back as
2017. Thus, the rocket attack on the base in Kirkuk and the subsequent protests
at the U.S. embassy in Baghdad were merely a cynical pretext to trigger the
assassination plan.
The killing of Soleimani
resulted in an outpouring of national grief across Iran for a hero figure and a
retaliation ballistic missile attack by Iran against two U.S. bases in Iraq on
January 8. There were no American casualties in those attacks. But the world
was brought to the brink of war. A war which could have spiraled into a
regional conflict and even a world war given the strategic balance of forces in
the region, including those of Russia, NATO and Israel.
In the event, war was
narrowly averted. But one tragic outcome was the accidental shooting down of
Ukrainian airliner Flight 752 above Tehran on the morning of January 8. Iranian
air defenses fired in the mistaken belief it was an enemy target amid
heightened tensions of war with the U.S. in retaliation for the Iranian missile
attack on American bases in Iraq only hours earlier. All 176 onboard the
airliner were killed. All the more damnable is that assassinations, the brink
of war and the loss of innocent civilians all stemmed from what appears now to
be an odious lie from the Trump administration.
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