Iraq and Syria open border crossing closed since 2012

Iraq and Syria on Monday opened a key border
crossing between the two neighboring countries, seven years after it was closed
during Syria’s civil war and the battle against the Islamic State group.
The opening of the crossing linking the Iraqi town
of Qaim and Syria’s Boukamal is expected to strengthen trade between the two
Arab countries.
But it is also a boost to Iran’s influence in the
region, allowing Iran-backed militias in Iraq easier access to eastern Syria
amid soaring tensions in the region between Tehran and Washington following the
collapse of Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers.
In a symbolic gesture, Syrian Interior Minister Maj.
Gen. Mohammed Khaled Rahmoun, accompanied by Syrian troops, crossed onto the
Iraqi side of the border, where troops from both countries hugged each other
and took selfies.
Qaim and Boukamal were controlled by the Islamic
State group until 2017, when Syrian and Iraqi troops captured the towns from
the extremist. The group’s territorial defeat was announced in Syria earlier
this year.
Iraqi authorities had set up tents for Monday’s
ceremony amid tight security, with troops deployed around the crossing. Despite
their official defeat, IS sleeper cells are still blamed for deadly attacks on
both sides of the border.
“The opening of Boukamal-Qaim crossing is a victory
for Syrian and Iraqi friendship against takfiri terrorism,” read a banner
placed on the Syrian side of the border, a reference to the extremist ideology
of the IS.
Some 800 freight trucks are expected to cross from
Syria once the crossing has been opened, Syria’s state news agency said.
Qaim was once a thriving stopover on the highway
linking Damascus and Baghdad. Long before a hard border materialized in the
latter half of the 20th century, tribes sent their grooms and brides across the
frontier to marry, extending the branches of their families on both sides.
The opening of the crossing was postponed several
times in recent weeks. Earlier in September, Syria blamed Israel for a
nighttime airstrike on an arms depot and posts of Iranian-backed militias in
Boukamal that opposition activist said killed at least 18 fighters.
Israel considers Iran to be its greatest enemy, and
as Syria’s civil war winds down, it has repeatedly warned that it will not
allow Iranian troops — who have been fighting alongside Syrian President Bashar
Assad’s forces — to maintain a permanent presence in postwar Syria.
Syria and Iraq have three key border crossings
between them, with Boukamal the only one controlled by the Assad’s government.
The second one is controlled by U.S.-backed Kurdish-led fighters known as the
Syrian Democratic Forces, while the third crossing, the nearby Tanf, is held by
U.S.-backed Syrian rebels.