Washington threatens to impose sanctions on Iraqi militias
The U.S. State Department threatened to impose sanctions on some Iraqi militias.
It said the U.S. would take all the necessary measures to
protect its embassies and diplomatic missions.
It noted that some militias, funded by other countries,
target Iraqi institutions and Iraqi citizens.
The State Department added that it would continue to
coordinate at the security level with Iraqi security forces against these
militias.
It said the U.S. would continue to be present in Iraq and
that it would have to take the necessary measures to protect its embassies.
Samuel Werberg, the Director of the
Dubai Regional Media Hub, said the U.S. would continue to have good relations
with Iraqis.
He said he lived in Iraq between 2009
and 2019 and saw the violence of the country's militias himself.
I am, he said, aware of the challenges
and dangers facing us and our embassy in Iraq.
However, he noted that the U.S. would
continue to have good relations with the Iraqi people because the people
deserve these relations.
Meanwhile, Chairman of al-Hal Party, Jamal
al-Karbouli, accused Iraq's militias of killing civilians and breaking the law.
"They destroyed the cities and forced their residents
to leave them," Karbouli said. "They put youth in prison, humiliated
elderly people and killed children," he wrote on Twitter.
He noted that the militias shell the houses of civilians
and are only deterred by threats made by the U.S.
"This happens in a country where the law is broken a
thousand times every day," Karbouli said. "Sorry to say, the
government stands hand-tied in front of all this."



