Blaming Kurds for unrest, Iran threatens Iraq with offensive
A senior Iranian military official
visiting Baghdad this week threatened Iraq with a ground military operation in
the country’s north if the Iraqi army does not fortify the countries’ shared
border against Kurdish opposition groups, multiple Iraqi and Kurdish officials
said.
Such an offensive, if carried out,
would be unprecedented in Iraq, and raise the specter of regional fallout from
Iran’s domestic unrest, which Tehran has portrayed as a foreign plot without
offering evidence.
The warning was delivered this week
to Iraqi and Kurdish officials in Baghdad by Iran’s Quds Force commander Esmail
Ghaani, who arrived in the capital Monday on an unannounced two-day visit. The
force is an elite unit within Iran’s Revolutionary Guard.
Iran alleges that Kurdish opposition
groups long exiled in northern Iraq are inciting anti-government protests in
Iran and smuggling weapons into the country. Iranian authorities have not
provided evidence of these allegations which Kurdish groups have denied.
It is unclear how serious the
Iranian warning is, but it puts Baghdad in a predicament. It is the first time
Iranian officials have publicly threatened a ground operation after months of
cross-border tensions and asking Iraq to disarm opposition groups active inside
its territories.
Now in their second month, protests
demanding the overthrow of Iran’s clerical rulers erupted after the death of a
22-year-old Kurdish-Iranian woman, Mahsa Amini, in policy custody in Tehran.
Thousands have been arrested and hundreds killed as Iranian authorities wield
live ammunition to keep control of the streets, but the protests show no signs
of abating. Amini’s home Kurdish areas have often been at the center of the
unrest.
Iran has blamed foreign meddling for
instigating the protests, and has pointed the finger at Kurdish opposition
groups in northern Iraq, accusing them of direct involvement and having ties to
Israel. Tehran has repeatedly launched missile attacks targeting the bases of
these groups inside Iraq, killing at least a dozen and wounding many more.
Ghaani arrived in Baghdad a day
after the latest Iranian attack targeting opposition bases in Koya, in Irbil
province, in which at least three were killed.
He met with Prime Minister Mohammed
Shia al-Sudani and other leaders of the Coordination Framework alliance,
President Abdul Latif Rashid, a Kurd, and Iran-backed militia factions. Sudani
came to power as the choice candidate of the Coordination Framework, an
alliance made up of mostly Iran-backed parties.
Ghaani’s demands were two-fold:
Disarm the bases of Iranian Kurdish opposition groups in northern Iraq, and
fortify the porous borders with Iraqi troops to prevent infiltration.
If Baghdad did not meet the demands,
Iran would launch a military sweep with ground forces and continue to bombard
opposition bases, Ghaani told his Iraqi counterparts, according to two Shiite
political figures, two militia officials and a senior Kurdish official. All
spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the
media about the sensitive meeting.
The area of Iran’s concern falls
under the authority of the semi-autonomous Kurdish region and would require
Baghdad to negotiate joint coordination.
Iraqi officials said privately that
they see no evidence to support Iran’s allegations against the Kurdish groups.
Kurdish opposition parties, while
acknowledging deep ties with Kurdish areas in Iran, likewise deny they are
smuggling weapons to arm protesters. Amini, the young woman who died in police
custody, was from the Kurdish city of Saqqez, the first area to witness
protests in September.
Kurdish opposition parties said
their involvement does not go beyond providing moral support, raising
awareness, and helping to provide medical care to injured protesters arriving
from Iran.
Soran Nuri, a leading member of the
Kurdistan Democratic Party in Iran, or KDPI, said he was aware of Iran’s
demands. “We have never smuggled weapons to or from any country,” he
maintained.
“We are hoping (the Kurdish region)
won’t succumb to these threats.”
Iraqi security officials have tried
repeatedly to persuade Tehran that no weapons are being smuggled from Iraq to
Iran, but “Iran ignores this,” according to a senior Kurdish official who spoke
on condition of anonymity in order to speak freely.
Some Kurdish groups have been
engaged in a low-intensity conflict with Tehran ever since the 1979 Iranian
Islamic Revolution, leading to many members seeking political exile in
neighboring Iraq where they have established bases.
Opposition members in Iraq openly
carry medium-sized weapons at the bases, saying it’s for self defense.
Tehran has long alleged that agents
for Israel’s Mossad are active in Iraqi Kurdish areas.
In March, Iran claimed
responsibility for a missile barrage that struck near the U.S. consulate in
Irbil. Iran said at the time it was targeting an Israeli “strategic center,”
Kurdish officials have denied such a center existed.
Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein
Amirabdollahian reiterated the allegations in a recent tweet, accusing Israel
and “some Western politicians” of planning “civil war, destruction and
disintegration of Iran.”
“The Iranian regime is in a paranoid
mode,” said Randa Slim, a program director at the Middle East Institute. “They
firmly believe Mossad is using the Kurdish territory and Kurdish opposition
groups to send weapons (and) fighters into Kurdish areas in Iran.”
A sweep operation in northern Iraq,
she said, would support the regime’s public narrative that outside forces
foment the unrest and would address a lingering dispute Iran has had with the
semi-autonomous Iraqi Kurdish region about the activities of the groups in its
territory.