Iraq’s prime minister
revealed that he was due to be meeting the Iranian commander to discuss moves
being made to ease the confrontation between Shia Iran and Sunni Saudi Arabia –
the crux of so much of strife in the Middle East and beyond.
As part of the incendiary
and escalating crisis surrounding the assassination of Qassem Soleimani, there
has come an explanation of why the Iranian commander was actually in Baghdad
when he was targeted by a US missile strike.
Adil Abdul-Mahdi was quite
clear: “I was supposed to meet him in the morning the day he was killed, he
came to deliver a message from Iran in response to the message we had delivered
from the Saudis to Iran.”
The prime minister also
disclosed that Donald Trump had called him to ask him to mediate following the
attack on the US embassy in Baghdad. According to Iraqi officials contact was
made with a number of militias as well as figures in Tehran. The siege of the
embassy was lifted and the US president personally thanked Abdul-Mahdi for his
help.
There was nothing to
suggest to the Iraqis that it was unsafe for Soleimani to travel to Baghdad –
quite the contrary. This suggests that Trump helped lure the Iranian commander
to a place where he could be killed. It is possible that the president was
unaware of the crucial role that Soleimani was playing in the attempted
rapprochement with the Saudis. Or that he knew but did not care.
One may even say that it is
not in the interest of a president who puts so much emphasis on American arms
exports, and whose first official trip after coming to office was a
weapons-selling trip to Saudi Arabia – during which he railed against Iran – to
have peace break out between the Iranians and the kingdom. But that would be
far too cynical a thought.
Abdul-Mahdi spoke of his
disappointment that while Trump was expressing his gratitude over the
mediation, he was also simultaneously planning an attack on Soleimani. That
attack took place not long after the telephone call from the president.
There is also the
possibility that the US military planners knew nothing about the conversations
between Trump and Abdul-Mahdi, and took out Soleimani when the opportunity
presented itself.
There may be credence to
this, if one follows the narrative which is emerging from defence and
intelligence officials in Washington: that the assassination option presented
to Trump was bound to be refused, as it had been by his predecessors in the
White House. And that there was a desperate scramble to track down Soleimani
when, much to their shock, Trump ordered the hit.
The existence of the talks
between the Saudi and the Iranians and, more importantly, the threat of
impending violence, has meant reaction in Riyadh at the killing has been
markedly muted.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman, not a stranger to sabre rattling, has sent his younger brother, deputy
defence minister Khalid bin Salman, to Washington to urge restraint.
The very real risk of the
region becoming an arena for conflict has led to rare cooperation in the
stand-off between the Saudi-led Gulf block and Qatar, whose foreign minister
was dispatched to Tehran with a similar appeal for calm.
In Tehran, Mohammed bin
Abdulrahman Al Thani met with Iranian president Hassan Rouhani to discuss
“measures to maintain the security and stability of the region,” the state-run
Qatar News Agency reported. While in the UAE the foreign minister, Anwar
Gargash, called for “rational engagement”, tweeting: “wisdom and balance must
prevail.”
As well as being in danger
of getting caught in the crossfire of a war between the US and Iran, the Arab
states in the region are vulnerable to Tehran’s allied militias – in Lebanon,
Yemen, Iraq and Syria. There is concern whether the US, after unleashing a wave
of missiles, would do anything when retribution is taken on its partner
countries.
The Saudis learned only too
clearly last summer that one cannot always depend on American commitment, when
drone and missile attacks on oil-processing facilities in the kingdom halved
oil production. Trump directly blamed Iran for the attacks but there was no
American military response, just as there has not been to the many attacks on
the kingdom from the Houthis in Yemen.
In the light of all this
Khalid al-Dakhil, a Saudi political sociologist, pointed out: “Saudi Arabia and
all the Gulf countries are just quiet. They don’t want to antagonise the
Iranians, because the situation in the region is so delicate, so divided, so
sensitive, that you don’t want to stir it up further.”
Robert Emerson, a British
security analyst, said that it was clear why caution was prevailing. “You don’t
know whether Trump will just light the blue touchpaper and then just
disappear,” he said. “The Arab states are right to be wary. The talk about Iran
and Saudi negotiations is intriguing, further details should be emerging.’’
The Trump administration
continues to insist that Soleimani was killed because he was about to launch an
imminent terror campaign, without providing any evidence for the assertion.
There is increasing scepticism about the claim and the questions are not going
to go away. There are too many memories of Saddam Hussein and his non-existent
WMD arsenal. The repercussions from the assassination in Baghdad will continue
for a very long time.
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