Iran Proxies in Iraq Threaten US with Sophisticated Weapons
The US security authorities suspect that the Iranian-backed Iraqi militias are involved in launching several drone attacks against sensitive targets inside Iraq, in an attempt to evade US defenses, according to a report by the New York Times.
Washington is grappling with a
rapidly evolving threat from Iranian proxies in Iraq after militia forces
specialized in operating more sophisticated weaponry, including armed drones.
Those militias have used small,
explosive-laden drones that crash into their targets in late-night attacks on
Iraqi bases at least three times in the past two months.
US officials reported that the
bases attacked include those used by the CIA and US Special Operations units.
Iran, weakened by years of harsh
economic sanctions, is using its proxy militias in Iraq to step up pressure on
the US and other world powers to negotiate an easing of those sanctions as part
of a revival of the 2015 nuclear deal.
Iraqi and US officials say Iran
has designed the drone attacks to minimize casualties that could prompt US
retaliation.
Top US commander in the Middle
East Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr. told the Associated Press last month that the
drones pose a serious threat, and that the military was rushing to devise ways
to combat them.
A former CIA officer and top
Middle East policy official at the Pentagon, Michael Mulroy said that with
technology provided by Iran’s Quds Force, the drones are rapidly becoming more
sophisticated at a relatively low cost.
“The drones are a big deal, one of the most
significant threats our troops there face,” he said.
A senior Iraqi national security
official said the drones posed a challenge but were tools, not the heart of the
problem.
“This is a means of pressure,” said the
official, who asked not to be identified, noting that “Iran is suffocating
economically. The more it suffers the more these attacks increase.”
Iran has used proxy militias in
Iraq since 2003 to influence Iraqi politics and threaten the US outside its
borders.
Since late 2019, Iran-backed Iraqi
militias have conducted more than 300 attacks against US interests, killing
four US citizens and about 25 others, mostly Iraqis, according to a Defense
Intelligence Agency assessment published in April.
In the last year, a proliferation
of previously unknown armed groups emerged, some claiming responsibility for
rocket attacks on US targets, reported NYT.
The increased precision of the
drone strikes this year marks an escalation from the more common Katyusha
rocket attacks that US officials have viewed more as harassment.
The attacks, launched from mobile
launchers, have been aimed at the US Embassy in Baghdad’s Green Zone and
military bases where some 2,500 forces and thousands of US military contractors
operate.
Furthermore, some US analysts say
that the militants are now targeting sites, even specific aircraft hangars,
where sophisticated armed MQ-9 Reaper drones and contractor-operated turboprop
surveillance aircraft are stationed in an attempt to disrupt or cripple the US
reconnaissance capability critical to monitoring threats in Iraq.
The US used Reapers for its most
sensitive strikes, including the killing of Iranian commander of al-Quds Force,
Maj. Gen. Qassim Soleimani, and Iraqi commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis in
Baghdad in January 2020.
A number of officials reported
that Washington installed defenses to counter rocket, artillery, and mortar
systems at installations in Iraq, however, the armed drones fly too low to be
detected by those defenses.
Shortly before midnight on April
14, a drone strike targeted a CIA hangar inside the airport complex in the
northern Iraqi city of Erbil, according to three US officials familiar with the
matter.
No one was reported hurt in the
attack, but it alarmed Pentagon and White House officials because of the covert
nature of the facility and the sophistication of the strike.
A similar drone attack in the
early morning hours of May 8 on the Ayn al-Asad airbase in western Anbar
Province, where the United States also operates Reaper drones, also raised
concerns among US commanders about militias’ shifting tactics.
The attack caused no injuries but
damaged an aircraft hangar, according to Col. Wayne Marotto, a spokesman for
the US-led coalition in Iraq.
Three days later, another drone
struck just after midnight at an airfield in Harir, north of Erbil, that is
used by the military’s highly secretive Joint Special Operations Command.
The explosive-laden drone crashed,
causing no injuries or damage, coalition officials said but fueled the growing
worries.