Inside the plot by Iran’s Soleimani to attack U.S. forces in Iraq
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[January 04, 2020]
By Reuters staff
(Reuters) - In mid-October, Iranian
Major-General Qassem Soleimani met with his Iraqi Shi'ite militia allies
at a villa on the banks of the Tigris River, looking across at the U.S.
embassy complex in Baghdad.
The Revolutionary Guards commander instructed his top ally in Iraq, Abu
Mahdi al-Muhandis, and other powerful militia leaders to step up attacks
on U.S. targets in the country using sophisticated new weapons provided
by Iran, two militia commanders and two security sources briefed on the
gathering told Reuters.
The strategy session, which has not been previously reported, came as
mass protests against Iran’s growing influence in Iraq were gaining
momentum, putting the Islamic Republic in an unwelcome spotlight.
Soleimani’s plans to attack U.S. forces aimed to provoke a military
response that would redirect that rising anger toward the United States,
according to the sources briefed on the gathering, Iraqi Shi’ite
politicians and government officials close to Iraqi Prime Minister Adel
Abdul Mahdi.
Soleimani’s efforts ended up provoking the U.S. attack on Friday that
killed him and Muhandis, marking a major escalation of tensions between
the United States and Iran. The two men died in air strikes on their
convoy at a Baghdad airport as they headed to the capital, dealing a
major blow to the Islamic Republic and the Iraqi paramilitary groups it
supports.
Interviews with the Iraqi security sources and Shi'ite militia
commanders offer a rare glimpse of how Soleimani operated in Iraq, which
he once told a Reuters reporter he knew like the back of his hand.
Two weeks before the October meeting, Soleimani ordered Iranian
Revolutionary Guards to move more sophisticated weapons - such as
Katyusha rockets and shoulder-fired missiles that could bring down
helicopters - to Iraq through two border crossings, the militia
commanders and Iraqi security sources told Reuters.
At the Baghdad villa, Soleimani told the assembled commanders to form a
new militia group of low-profile paramilitaries - unknown to the United
States - who could carry out rocket attacks on Americans housed at Iraqi
military bases. He ordered Kataib Hezbollah - a force founded by
Muhandis and trained in Iran - to direct the new plan, said the militia
sources briefed on the meetings.
Soleimani told them such a group “would be difficult to detect by the
Americans,” one of the militia sources told Reuters.
Before the attacks, the U.S. intelligence community had reason to
believe that Soleimani was involved in “late stage” planning to strike
Americans in multiple countries, including Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, U.S.
officials told Reuters Friday on condition of anonymity. One senior U.S.
official said Soleimani had supplied advanced weaponry to Kataib
Hezbollah.
White House national security adviser Robert O’Brien told reporters on
Friday that Soleimani had just come from Damascus, “where he was
planning attacks on American soldiers, airmen, Marines, sailors and
against our diplomats.”
An official at the headquarters of Iran's Revolutionary Guards declined
to comment. A spokesperson for the Iranian foreign ministry was not
available for comment.
PICKING U.S. TARGETS WITH DRONES
The United States has grown increasingly concerned about Iran's
influence over the ruling elite in Iraq, which has been beset for months
by protesters who accuse the government of enriching itself and serving
the interests of foreign powers, especially Iran, as Iraqis languish in
poverty without jobs or basic services.
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Iranian demonstrators chant slogans during a protest against the
killing of the Iranian Major-General Qassem Soleimani, head of the
elite Quds Force, and Iraqi militia commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis,
who were killed in an air strike at Baghdad airport, in front of
United Nations office in Tehran, Iran January 3, 2020. WANA (West
Asia News Agency)/Nazanin Tabatabaee via REUTERS
Soleimani, leader of the Revolutionary Guards' Quds Force, was
instrumental in expanding Iran's military influence in the Middle
East as the operative who handles clandestine operations outside
Iran. The 62-year-old general was regarded as the second-most
powerful figure in Iran after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Muhandis, a former Iraqi lawmaker, oversaw Iraq’s Popular
Mobilization Forces (PMF), an umbrella grouping of paramilitary
forces mostly consisting of Iran-backed Shi’ite militias that was
formally integrated into Iraq’s armed forces.
Muhandis, like Soleimani, had long been on the radar of the United
States, which had declared Muhandis a terrorist. In 2007, a Kuwaiti
court sentenced him to death in absentia for his involvement in the
1983 U.S. and French embassy bombings in Kuwait.
Soleimani picked Kataib Hezbollah to lead the attacks on U.S. forces
in the region because it had the capability to use drones to scout
targets for Katyusha rocket attacks, one of the militia commanders
told Reuters. Among the weapons that Soleimani's forces supplied to
its Iraqi militia allies last fall was a drone Iran had developed
that could elude radar systems, the militia commanders said.
Kataib Hezbollah used the drones to gather aerial footage of
locations where U.S. troops were deployed, according to two Iraqi
security officials who monitor the movements of militias.
On December 11, a senior U.S. military official said attacks by
Iranian-backed groups on bases hosting U.S. forces in Iraq were
increasing and becoming more sophisticated, pushing all sides closer
to an uncontrollable escalation.
His warning came two days after four Katyusha rockets struck a base
near Baghdad international airport, wounding five members of Iraq's
elite Counter-Terrorism Service. No group claimed responsibility for
the attack but a U.S. military official said intelligence and
forensic analyses of the rockets and launchers pointed to
Iranian-backed Shi’ite Muslim militia groups, notably Kataib
Hezbollah and Asaib Ahl al-Haq.
On Dec. 27 more than 30 rockets were fired at an Iraqi military base
near the northern Iraq city of Kirkuk. The attack killed a U.S.
civilian contractor and wounded four American and two Iraq
servicemen.
Washington accused Kataib Hezbollah of carrying out the attack, an
allegation it denied. The United States then launched air strikes
two days later against the militia, killing at least 25 militia
fighters and wounding 55.
The attacks sparked two days of violent protests by supporters of
Iranian-backed Iraqi paramilitary groups who stormed the U.S.
Embassy’s perimeter and hurled rocks, prompting Washington to
dispatch extra troops to the region and threaten reprisals against
Tehran.
On Thursday – the day before the attack that killed Soleimani - U.S.
Defense Secretary Mark Esper warned that the United States might
have to take preemptive action to protect American lives from
expected attacks by Iran-backed militias.
“The game has changed,” he said.
(Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Brian Thevenot)
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