Trump threatens Iran after US embassy in Baghdad attacked
Donald Trump has directly threatened Iran, saying it
will pay a “very big price” for any US lives lost or facilities damaged in the
wake of a mob attack on the American embassy in Baghdad.
In a humiliating day for Washington, hundreds of
supporters of Iraqi Shia militia, many wearing military fatigues, besieged the
US compound, at one point breaching the main gate and smashing their way into
several reception rooms. They lit fires, battered down doors and threw bricks
at bulletproof glass.
The rampage was carried out with the apparent
connivance of Iraqi security forces who allowed protesters inside the highly
protected Green Zone. US guards responded with teargas but did not open fire.
After declaring the embassy safe, Trump tweeted:
“Iran will be held fully responsible for lives lost, or damage incurred, at any
of our facilities. They will pay a very BIG PRICE! This is not a Warning, it is
a Threat. Happy New Year!”
The Trump administration’s declared policy has been
to treat any attack on US interests by Iranian proxies as an attack by Iran
itself. On Sunday, the US conducted air strikes on bases belonging to the
Kata’ib Hezbollah militia group, which is formally part of the Iraqi army. The
group’s attacks on Iraqi bases hosting coalition forces culminated in the death
of a US contractor and injuries to at least four American soldiers in Kirkuk on
Friday.
At least 25 fighters were killed and dozens injured
in the US strikes. The embassy attack followed.
Instead of advancing US goals, the airstrikes appear
to be the latest in a series of foreign policy blunders in the Middle East.
Iraq’s government furiously condemned them, while pro-Iranian militias promised
further attacks against American targets, with the goal of expelling US forces.
“Iran killed an American contractor, wounding many.
We strongly responded, and always will,” Trump tweeted. “Now Iran is
orchestrating an attack on the US embassy in Iraq. They will be held fully
responsible.”
The US embassy denied earlier reports from Iraq’s
foreign ministry that the ambassador and his staff were hastily evacuated, as
protesters surged towards the building.
A state department spokesperson told the Guardian
the chief of the US mission in Iraq, Matthew Tueller, was away on a scheduled
vacation and left Baghdad a week ago. The embassy was under lockdown but had
not been evacuated, officials said, with diplomats sheltering in a “safe room”.
“The Iranian-backed demonstrations in front of the
US embassy should not be confused with the Iraqi protesters who have been in
the streets since October to decry the corruption exported to Iraq by the
Iranian regime,” the spokeswoman said.
“We have made clear the United States will protect
and defend its people, who are there to support a sovereign and independent
Iraq. We are closely monitoring the situation in Iraq and call on the
government of Iraq to protect our diplomatic facilities per their obligations.”
Video from the scene showed thick grey smoke
engulfing the compound against a backdrop of wailing from an emergency siren.
Protesters shouted “no, no, America!” and “no, no, Trump!”, and “death to
America!”. By nightfall fires were still burning. One masked man walked off
with an official US embassy sign.
The US state department said personnel at the
embassy were safe and there were no plans to evacuate. “Our first priority is
the safety and security of US personnel,” a spokesperson said in a statement.
“US personnel are secure and there has been no
breach,” the spokesperson said. “There are no plans to evacuate Embassy
Baghdad.”
The US defence secretary, Mark Esper, announced that
he authorized the immediate deployment of about 750 soldiers to the Middle
East. He said additional troops are prepared to deploy over the next several
days.
Former foreign service staff compared the chaotic
scenes to the ransacking in 1979 of the US embassy in Tehran, when 52 US
citizens were taken hostage. Tuesday’s events, however, were not on the same
dramatic scale. There was no loss of life and most of the embassy building was
not breached.
Nonetheless, the prospect of a worsening conflict
between US forces and Iranian proxies in Iraq looms large. The Trump
administration’s policy of piling sanctions and economic pressure on Tehran
appears to have delivered few tangible diplomatic results and has taken
relations with Iraq to a new low.
Iraq’s prime minister, Adel Abdul Mahdi – an ally of
both Iran and Washington – vowed on Tuesday to protect the safety and security
of US personnel. After doing little initially to halt the violence, Iraqi
security forces turned up in force in the afternoon and formed a protective
line between angry crowds and US guards.
The US secretary of state, Mike Pompeo said the US
would “protect and defend its people” in a phone call with Abdul Mahdi. The
viability of the US diplomatic mission in Baghdad – its largest in the world –
is now an open question, as demonstrators set up tents outside its perimeter.
Many of the protesters had come from funerals held in
Baghdad for some of the dead militia fighters. They were carrying flags
belonging to Kata’ib Hezbollah and to Hashd al-Shaabi (Popular Mobilization
Forces), a powerful paramilitary group of which Kata’ib Hezbollah is a part.
Qais al-Khazali, the leader of the Iranian-backed
Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq militia, and many other senior militia leaders were among the
demonstrators. On Monday, Iran condemned the US strikes as “terrorism”. Russia
complained it had not been given advance warning.
Street protests take place regularly in the Iraqi
capital. In recent months, security guards have shot dead more than 450 people
protesting against rampant government corruption and the growing influence of
Iranian-backed groups, including Kata’ib Hezbollah.