Rally in Baghdad marks 1 year since Iran general’s killing

Chanting
anti-American slogans, thousands of Iraqis converged on a landmark square in
central Baghdad on Sunday to commemorate the anniversary of the killing of a
powerful Iranian general and a top Iraqi militia leader in a U.S. drone strike.
Roads leading
to Tahrir Square were closed off and security was tight as the crowds gathered
in response to a call by powerful Iran-backed militias for a rally marking the
occasion and demanding the expulsion of U.S. troops from Iraq.
“No, no to America!” shouted some in the largely
mask-less crowd. “You killed our guest. There is no place here for your
embassy,” read some of the banners.
Protesters at
one point set fire to a large U.S. flag, drawing cheers from the crowd.
The killing
of Gen. Qassim Soleimani and Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis at Baghdad’s airport pushed
Tehran and Washington perilously close to all-out conflict and sparked outrage
in Iraq, leading parliament to pass a non-binding resolution days later calling
for the expulsion of all foreign troops from Iraq.
Sunday’s
rally was being held amid heightened tensions between Iran and the U.S. in the
final days of President Donald Trump’s administration.
Already,
America has conducted B-52 bomber flyovers and sent a nuclear submarine into
the Persian Gulf over what Trump officials describe as the possibility of an
Iranian attack on the anniversary of the strike that killed Soleimani and
al-Muhandis.
Carrying
Iraqi and militia flags and posters of the two men, thousands of Iraqis marched
toward Tahrir Square for the rally Sunday, demanding the withdrawal of U.S.
troops in implementation of the parliamentary resolution. The event was
organized by mostly Iran-backed militias known as the Popular Mobilization
Forces.
“We call upon the government and the parliament to
expel the occupying foreign forces, especially the brutal American forces, the
infidels, the immorals, who killed the heroes and leaders of victory,” said
Muhammad Shubr al-Husseini, a protester.
Abbas Ali, a
27-year-old protester carrying a poster of Soleimani, said he was there because
it was a day “to remember those who sacrificed their souls for Iraq.”
Soleimani
headed the elite Quds Force of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, responsible for the
Islamic Republic’s foreign operations, and he frequently shuttled between Iraq,
Lebanon and Syria. Al-Muhandis was Iraq’s most powerful militia leader and was
deputy commander of the PMF.
They both
gained prominence for advising Shiite paramilitary forces fighting the Islamic
State group in Iraq, before it was defeated in 2017.
Their killing
dramatically ratcheted up tensions in the region and brought the U.S. and Iran
to the brink of war. Iran hit back by firing a barrage of ballistic missiles at
two Iraqi bases housing U.S. troops, some of whom suffered concussions. Iranian
officials have suggested that more retaliation is coming.
On Saturday
night, thousands of people took part in a commemoration ceremony held at
Baghdad’s airport where the strike took place a year ago.
Mourners,
many of them members of the PMF, joined a march on the highway leading to the
airport. Posters of the dead men adorned both sides of the road, which was
lined with tents that served food and drinks for those who walked the highway.
The scene of
the bombing was turned into a shrine-like area sealed off by red ropes, with a
photo of Soleimani and al-Muhandis in the middle, as mourners lit candles.
Shrapnel marks were still visible on the asphalt and concrete blast walls in
the area.
The wreckage
of two cars was on display on the road outside the airport as a reminder of the
attack.
In Lebanon,
the Shiite militant Hezbollah grouped marked the anniversary of Soleimani’s
killing with a symbolic event on a hill in the country’s south overlooking the
border area with Israel.
A group of
Hezbollah fighters dressed in military uniforms swore the oath of Hezbollah
while officials raised the group’s yellow flag with posters of Soleimani and
al-Muhandis on it.