Kadhimi and the Quds Force commander: Ambiguous relationship between Iraq and Iran
 
After Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi took over the Iraqi
government in May, a new Iraqi trend regarding Iran has been noticed,
completely different from previous years in which the mullah regime largely
dominated Iraq’s decision-making circles. Day after day, Kadhimi proves this
new trend, which is already bothering the mullahs.
Iranian messages
Before the Iraqi prime minister visited Washington on August
19-21, Iraqi political sources announced to the media that a “secret visit” was
made to Iraq by the commander of the Iranian Quds Force, Esmail Qaani, on
August 16, during which he met with Kadhimi. The media reported that Qaani
presented several Iranian messages to the Iraqi prime minister, and the sources
pointed out that the meeting took place in Baghdad’s Green Zone in “complete
secrecy” and dealt with Kadhimi's visit to Washington and Qaani’s demand for
the need to withdraw US forces from Iraq since their presence worries and
threatens Iran.
A number of political analysts indicated that the aim behind
the Iranian Quds Force commander to Iraq at this particular time was an attempt
by Iran to spoil Kadhimi’s visit to Washington and to inform him of the mullahs’
messages, as Tehran did earlier when it sent Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad
Zarif to Iraq a day before Kadhimi was scheduled to visit Saudi Arabia on July
20, which was then canceled the day before due to Saudi King Salman bin
Abdulaziz’s admission to the hospital.
In addition, the deputy head of the Foreign Relations
Committee in the Iraqi Parliament, Dhafer al-Ani, announced on his Twitter
account that the Iranian regime is seeking to “dwarf Iraq” in the eyes of the
international community and turn it into a mere postman for Quds Force messages.
He stressed that Iraq is not obliged to carry the messages that Qaani brought
to deliver to US President Donald Trump, saying that this visit belongs to the prime
minister of Iraq and that Baghdad's interests are more important than the
interests of any other country.
Iraqi denial
These statements prompted Kadhimi to deny all this,
stressing that he did not carry any Iranan messages to Trump during his visit
to Washington and that Iraq would not play the role of mediator between Iran
and the United States. He said that he would “not be a postman” during his
visit to Washington, according to Iraqi media on August 18.
The Iraqi prime minister had previously confirmed in an
interview with AP that his country needs the support and cooperation of the
United States in order to confront the terrorist threat posed by ISIS. This
means that Kadhimi has come to realize that Iraq must confront all Iranian
interference in the country, which has caused insecurity and instability in
Iraq in recent years.
US demands
Firas Elias, an Iraqi political expert specializing in
Iranian affairs, told the Reference that Washington realizes it needs to obtain
broad commitments from Kadhimi, especially obligations related to the safety of
US military forces in Iraq, and to secure US interests from any future threats
that might emanate from Iran and its allies in Iraq.
Elias pointed out that the United States is seeking to
pressure Baghdad to find an alternative to Iran for the energy resources it
needs. Iraq continues to import oil from Iran, which has reduced the
effectiveness of the US sanctions imposed on Iran, which Tehran has exploited. Therefore,
the Trump administration is looking at Iraq in terms of how to confront Iran in
the Middle East.
          
     
                               
 
 


