20 Apr 2024
Thursday 17 January 2019 - 14:28
Story Code : 334970

Iraq likely theater if US, Iran tensions worsen: Study

Bourse and Bazaar | AFP: Iraq could bear the brunt if conflictintensifies between Iran and the United States, a think-tank study saidWednesday.








The International Crisis Group, which researches ways to prevent war,interviewed officials around the world including Iran for an extensive reporton the state of the 2015 denuclearization accord between Tehran and majorpowers.

President Donald Trump has withdrawn the United States and ramped upeconomic pressure aimed at isolating Iran, although Europeans still back theaccord negotiated under former president Barack Obama.

The International Crisis Group said that Iran would likely continue tocomply with the deal, seeing itself as holding the moral high ground andcapable of waiting out Trump, who faces re-election next year.

But the study said that Tehran's calculations could change if its oilexports, which stood at 3.8 million barrels a day in 2017, fall below 700,000,a level that could trigger hyper-inflation and intensify domestic protestswhich for now appear manageable.

If Iran decides to retaliate against the United States, the report saidthat Tehran may find its most attractive option to be to employ its proxiesaround the Middle East, a path that would be murky enough to avoid a strongEuropean reaction.

The report quoted a senior Iranian national security official as sayingthat the likeliest theater was Iraq, where militias from the Shiite majorityhave close ties with Tehran.

"Iraq is where we have experience, plausible deniability and the requisitecapability to hit the US below the threshold that would prompt a directretaliation," the official was quoted as saying.

Iran is also deeply involved in Syria and Lebanon, but the two countriesare especially fragile and Tehran could lose its gains, the official said.

Iran has limited assets in Afghanistan, while stepping up support for Houthis in Yemen would hurt regional rival Saudi Arabia more than the UnitedStates, the official said.

The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday that Trump's hawkish nationalsecurity adviser, John Bolton, asked for military options to strike Iran afteran Iranian-linked group launched a mortar attack in September on Baghdad's"Green Zone," the protected area where the US embassy is located. The US saysits embassy was the target.

No one was hurt and demonstrators also ransacked the Iranian consulate inBasra during the wave of protests over economic conditions in Iraq.







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