Everything in the US-Iran tensions after Soleimani assassination
Thousands of
mourners dressed in black gathered on Sunday in the southwestern Iranian city
of Ahvaz to pay respects to top general Qasem Soleimani, days after he was
killed in a US strike.
ISNA news agency
said Soleimani's remains and those of five other Iranians -- all Guards members
-- killed in the US drone strike had arrived at Ahvaz airport before dawn.
On Monday, supreme
leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is expected to pray over his remains at Tehran
University before a procession to Azadi Square.
His remains are
then due to be taken to the holy city of Qom for a ceremony at Masumeh shrine,
ahead of a funeral in his hometown Kerman on Tuesday.
Trump says 52
targets already lined up if Iran retaliates
President Donald
Trump warned that the US is targeting 52 sites in Iran and will hit them
"very fast and very hard" if Iran attacks American personnel or
assets.
In a saber-rattling
tweet that defended Friday's US drone strike assassination of the powerful
Iranian general, Qasem Soleimani in Iraq, Trump said 52 represents the number
of Americans held hostage at the US embassy in Tehran for more than a year
starting in late 1979.
Trump said some of
these sites are "at a very high level & important to Iran & the
Iranian culture, and those targets, and Iran itself, "will be hit very
fast and very hard.
Erdogan urges
against escalation in crisis
Turkey’s President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged Iranian President Hassan Rouhani to refrain from
escalating tensions with the US.
Erdogan offered
condolences to Rouhani over military commander Qasem Soleimani's assassination
due to his official post and did not use ‘martyr' to describe him, a Turkish
official spoke to TRT World.
Air strike in Iraq
prompts anti-war protests in US cities
Groups of
protesters took to the streets in Washington and other US cities to condemn the
air strike in Iraq ordered by President Donald Trump that killed Iranian
military commander Qasem Soleimani and Trump's decision to send about 3,000
more troops to the Middle East.
"No justice,
no peace. US out of the Middle East," hundreds of demonstrators chanted
outside the White House before marching to the Trump International Hotel a few
blocks away.
Similar protests
were held in New York, Chicago and other cities.
EU urges de-escalation
European Union
foreign policy chief Josep Borrell stressed the "need for
de-escalation" after the US assassination of a top Iranian commander in
Baghdad.
After meeting
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in Brussels, Borrell tweeted:
"Spoke w
Iranian FM @JZarif about recent developments. Underlined need for de-escalation
of tensions, to exercise restraint & avoid further escalation".
Borrell said he
urged Zarif to maintain the nuclear accord negotiated between Iran and the UN
Security Council permanent members, plus Germany.
Britain urged all
parties to show restraint but said its closest ally was entitled to defend
itself against an imminent threat.
"Under
international law, the United States is entitled to defend itself against those
posing an imminent threat to their citizens," Defence Minister Ben Wallace
said.
Missiles hit Green
Zone and Iraq base housing US troops
In Baghdad, mortar
rounds on Saturday evening hit the Green Zone, the high-security enclave where
the US embassy is based, security sources said.
The Iraqi military
said that one projectile hit inside the zone, while another landed close to the
enclave.
Sirens rang out at
the US compound, sources there told AFP.
A pair of Katyusha
rockets then hit the Balad airbase north of Baghdad, where American troops are
based, security sources and the Iraqi military said.
Security sources
there reported blaring sirens and said surveillance drones were sent above the
base to locate the source of the rockets.
The US embassy in
Baghdad, as well as the 5,200 American troops stationed across the country have
faced a spate of rocket attacks in recent months that Washington has blamed on
Iran and its allies in Iraq.
Thousands join
Baghdad funeral for slain commanders
Thousands of Iraqis
chanting "Death to America" joined the funeral procession on Saturday
for Iranian commander Soleimani and Iraqi paramilitary chief Muhandis, both
killed in a US air strike.
The cortege set off
around Kadhimiya, a Shia pilgrimage district of Baghdad, before heading to the
Green Zone government and diplomatic compound where a state funeral was to be
held attended by top dignitaries.
A prayer ceremony
will be held at Baghdad's al Kadhimiya Mosque before Muhandis' body is sent to
Najaf in the south for burial.
Soleimani's body
will be buried in the Iranian town of Kerman.
Iraqi militia
retract fresh air strike statement
Iraq's military
denied on Saturday an air strike had taken place on a medical convoy in Taji,
north of Baghdad.
Iraq's Popular
Mobilisation Forces umbrella grouping of paramilitary groups had said earlier
that an air strike targeting its fighters hit a convoy of medics.
However, the PMF
later issued another statement saying that no medical convoys were targeted in
Taji.
They said that no
strike took place.
The US confirmed it
had not authorised any air strike in the region overnight.
Killing of
Soleimani was to prevent war, not start one-Trump
President Donald
Trump said on Friday he ordered the killing of Soleimani to stop a war, not
start one, saying the Iranian military commander was planning imminent attacks
on Americans.
"Soleimani was
plotting imminent and sinister attacks on American diplomats and military
personnel but we caught him in the act and terminated him," Trump told
reporters at his Mar-a-Lago resort.
"We took
action last night to stop a war. We did not take action to start a war,"
Trump said, adding that the United States does not seek regime change in Iran.
US deploying nearly
3,000 more troops to Mideast
The United States
said on Friday it is sending nearly 3,000 more Army troops to the Mideast in
the volatile aftermath of the killing of an Iranian general in a strike ordered
by President Donald Trump.
Defence officials,
who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a decision not yet announced by
the Pentagon, said the troops are from the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort
Bragg, North Carolina.
They are in
addition to about 700 soldiers from the 82nd Airborne who deployed to Kuwait
earlier this week after the storming of the US embassy compound in Baghdad by
Iran-backed militiamen and their supporters.
Iraqi parliament to
hold extraordinary session
Iraq's parliament
will hold an extraordinary session on Sunday to discuss the US air strike in
Baghdad which killed Iran's Quds Force leader Soleimani and Iraqi militia
commander Muhandis, it said on Friday.
Prime Minister Adil
Abdul Mahdi called on lawmakers to hold an emergency session and address the
attack, which he called a violation of sovereignty.
Iran summons Swiss
envoy again to answer US message
Iran summoned a
Swiss envoy for a second time on Friday to deliver its answer to a US message,
Iranian state media said, hours after a Swiss diplomat delivered Washington's
communication over the killing of Iranian Quds force chief Soleimani.
The Swiss envoy
representing US interests in Tehran was summoned to the Foreign Ministry to
receive the "proper" answer from Tehran, ministry spokesman Abbas
Mousavi told state news agency IRNA, without giving further details.
US senators to be
briefed on Iraq operation
US Senate
Republican leader Mitch McConnell said the Trump administration would brief
congressional staff on Friday about the US military strike against Iranian
military commander Soleimani and that it would likely conduct a classified
briefing for all senators early next week.
"This
terrorist mastermind was not just a threat to the United States and Israel. For
more than a decade, he masterminded Iran's malevolent and destabilising work
throughout the entire Middle East," McConnell said on the Senate floor as
he urged senators to withhold judgment on the operation until they had received
the facts.
Iran vows to avenge
commander's assassination
Iran's top security
body said on Friday the United States would be held accountable for killing
Iranian Quds Force commander Soleimani, saying Washington's action was its
worst mistake in the region, Iranian media reported.
"The US regime
will be responsible for the consequences of this criminal adventurism,"
the Supreme National Security Council said in a statement carried by media
outlets.
"This was the
biggest US strategic blunder in the West Asia region, and America will not
easily escape its consequences."
Macron calls on
Iran to refrain from provocation
French President
Emmanuel Macron said on Friday that Iran should refrain from any provocation,
speaking after a US air strike that killed a top Iranian commander in Iraq.
Macron also said in
his statement that he had held talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin to
discuss the situation in Iraq.
UN chief calls for
maximum restraint
United Nations
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is deeply concerned by the recent rise in
tensions in the Middle East, a spokesman said.
"The
Secretary-General has consistently advocated for de-escalation in the
Gulf. He is deeply concerned with the
recent escalation," said his spokesman, Farhan Haq, in a statement.
"This is a
moment in which leaders must exercise maximum restraint. The world cannot afford another war in the
Gulf."
Turkey 'deeply
concerned' about regional tension
The US air strike
in Baghdad which killed Iranian commander Soleimani will "harm both the
peace and stability of both Iraq and our region," the Turkish Foreign
Ministry said.
The ministry said
such escalating steps that threaten stability in the region will increase the
violence, "and all parties will suffer."
"Turkey has
always been against foreign interventions in the region, assassinations, and
sectarian conflict," it said.
Iraqi parliament
speaker condemns US air strike
Iraq's Speaker of
Parliament Mohammed al Halbousi condemned on the US air strike in Baghdad as a
"breach of sovereignty."
"Yesterday's
targeting of a military commander in Iraq's armed forces near Baghdad
international airport is a flagrant breach of sovereignty and violation of
international agreements," he said in a statement.
"Iraq must
avoid becoming a battlefield or a side in any regional or international
conflict," he added.
Halbousi, who as
speaker is Iraq's top Sunni Arab politician, called on the government to take
all steps needed to stop such attacks.
Lebanon condemns
Soleimani's killing
Lebanon's Foreign
Ministry on Friday called for the country and wider region to be spared any
repercussions from the Quds Force commander's death.
The ministry also
condemned the killing, calling it a violation of Iraqi sovereignty and a dangerous
escalation against Iran.
Iran never won a
war – Trump
US President Donald
Trump said that Iran never won a war, in the wake of the killing of a top
Iranian commander.
"Iran never
won a war but never lost a negotiation," Trump said on Twitter.
Trump said
Soleimani was plotting to kill many more Americans.
Egypt appeals
against escalation in Iraq
Egypt's Foreign
Ministry said it was following developments in Iraq with great concern and
appealed against any further escalation.
"The Foreign
Ministry is following with great concern accelerating developments in Iraq,
which augur an escalation important to avoid," the statement said.
"For this
reason, Egypt calls for containing the situation and avoiding any
escalation."
Tens of thousands
rally in Iran to protest US 'crimes'
Tens of thousands
of people took to the streets of Tehran to protest against US
"crimes."
Chanting "Death
to America" and holding up posters of the slain top Iranian commander
Soleimani, the demonstrators filled streets for several blocks in central
Tehran after Friday prayers.
State news agency
IRNA said there were similar demonstrations in the cities of Arak, Bojnourd,
Hamedan, Hormozgan, Sanandaj, Semnan, Shiraz, and Yazd.
News of the death
of Soleimani, one of Iran's most popular public figures, also saw people hold
impromptu gatherings in his central hometown of Kerman.
De-escalation with
Iran possible - Pompeo
Washington is
committed to "de-escalation" after the killing of Soleimani,
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Friday.
Pompeo said on
Twitter that he spoke to British Foreign Minister Dominic Raab and China's top
diplomat Yang Jiechi about the US decision to kill Soleimani.
US has right to
self-defence – Netanyahu
"Just as
Israel has the right of self-defence, the United States has exactly the same
right," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement
issued by his office.
"Qasem
Soleimani is responsible for the death of American citizens and many other
innocent people. He was planning more such attacks."
Esmail Qaani new
Quds chief after Soleimani killing
Iran's supreme
leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei appointed Esmail Qaani as the new head of the
Revolutionary Guard's foreign operations arm.
"Following the
martyrdom of the glorious general haj Qasem Soleimani, I name Brigadier General
Esmail Qaani as the commander of the Quds Force of the Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corp (IRGC)."
Act of aggression
on Iraq – PM Abdul Mahdi
The air strike on
Baghdad airport is an act of aggression on Iraq and a breach of its sovereignty
that will lead to war in Iraq, the region, and the world, Prime Minister Adil
Abdul Mahdi said in a statement.
"Liquidation
operations [assassinations] of leading Iraqi officials or from a friendly
country on Iraqi soil is a brazen violation of Iraq's sovereignty and blatant
attack on the nation's dignity," he said.
The strike also
violated the conditions of US military presence in Iraq and should be met with
legislation that safeguards Iraq's security and sovereignty, Abdul Mahdi added.
US citizens urged
to depart Iraq
The US embassy in
Baghdad urged all citizens to depart Iraq immediately, hours after the US
killed Soleimani and Muhandis in an air strike.
"Due to
heightened tensions in Iraq and the region, the US Embassy urges American
citizens to heed the January 2020 Travel Advisory and depart Iraq immediately.
US citizens should depart via airline while possible, and failing that, to
other countries via land," it said in a statement.
France says world
'more dangerous'
The world is
"more dangerous," France's Europe minister said, calling for efforts
to de-escalate the deepening conflict in the Middle East.
"We have woken
up to a more dangerous world," Amelie de Montchalin told RTL radio, saying
President Emmanuel Macron would consult soon with "players in the
region."
China urges 'calm
and restraint'
China appealed for
restraint from all sides, "especially the United States."
"China has
always opposed the use of force in international relations," Chinese
Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said at a daily press briefing.
Moscow warns of
increasing tensions
Moscow warned on
Friday that Soleimani's assassination would boost tensions across the Middle
East.
"The killing
of Soleimani ... was an adventurist step that will increase tensions throughout
the region," news agencies RIA Novosti and TASS quoted the Foreign
Ministry as saying.
"Soleimani
served the cause of protecting Iran's national interests with devotion. We
express our sincere condolences to the Iranian people."
A gruesome crime' -
Rouhani
Iran and the
"free nations of the region" will take revenge on the US for killing
Soleimani, President Hasan Rouhani said.
"There is no
doubt that the great nation of Iran and the other free nations of the region
will take revenge for this gruesome crime from criminal America," Rouhani
said, referring to Iran's allies across the Middle East.
Soleimani's
"martyrdom ... by the aggressor and criminal America has saddened the
heart of the nation of Iran and all the nations of the region," he said in
a statement posted on the Iranian government website.
Declaring three
days of mourning across the country, Iran's Khamenei vowed to take "severe
revenge" for 62-year-old Soleimani's death.
Iran's Foreign
Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif slammed the US strike as "extremely
dangerous and a foolish escalation."
Top official Mohsen
Rezai pledged to "exact terrible vengeance upon America," and
Tehran's top security council said it would hold an urgent meeting.
Sistani calls US
Iraq strike 'wanton attack'
Iraq's top Shia
cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani condemned the US air strike, calling it a
"wanton attack" on the country.
In his weekly
sermon delivered by his representative in the Shia holy city of Karbala,
Sistani said the raid amounted to a "blatant violation of Iraqi
sovereignty."
Iraq's Sadr mourns
Soleimani
Iraqi Shia cleric
Moqtada al Sadr mourned Soleimani's assassination, saying his militias were
ready to defend Iraq.
"As the patron
of the patriotic Iraqi resistance I give the order for all mujahideen,
especially the Mehdi Army, Promised Day Brigade, and all patriotic and
disciplined groups to be ready to protect Iraq," he said in a statement.
Sadr, who positions
himself as a nationalist rejecting both US and Iranian interference in Iraq,
however, called on all sides to behave with "wisdom and shrewdness."
Will Iran
retaliate? Experts speculate
"In terms of a
decapitation strike, what just happened is the most major decapitation strike
that the US has ever pulled off," said Phillip Smyth, a US-based
specialist in Shia armed groups.
He said it would
have "bigger" ramifications than the 2011 US operation that killed Al
Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden and the 2019 American raid that killed Daesh leader
Abu Bakr al Baghdadi.
"There is no
comparison," he added.
But others said it
remains unclear how Iran could respond to the blow.
"A lot of the
focus is on what is the price that the US is gonna pay and how Iran will
retaliate against the US," said Fanar Haddad of the Singapore University's
Middle East Institute.
US Congress not
informed of Iraq strike
US lawmakers,
however, were not told in advance of Friday's attack, House Foreign Affairs
Committee chairman Eliot Engel said in a statement.
"Tonight’s air
strike risks provoking further dangerous escalation of violence. America – and
the world – cannot afford to have tensions escalate to the point of no
return," US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
"The
Administration has conducted tonight’s strikes in Iraq without an Authorization
for Use of Military Force (AUMF) against Iran. Further, this action was taken
without the consultation of the Congress," Pelosi said.
Ties between the US
and Iran have deteriorated since Washington pulled out of the landmark nuclear
deal with Tehran in 2018.
It then reimposed
crippling sanctions on Iran, aiming to choke off its oil exports.
Oil prices soar
Oil prices soared
following Friday's attack, with Brent surging 4.4 percent to $69.16 and WTI jumping
4.3 percent to 63.84.
The attack
threatens to destabilise Iraq, which has close political and military ties with
both Tehran and Washington.
The US led the 2003
invasion against then-dictator Saddam Hussein and has worked closely with Iraqi
officials since.
But its influence
has waned compared with that of Tehran, which has carefully crafted personal
ties with Iraqi politicians and armed factions, even during Saddam's reign.
Iraqi officials
have warned in recent months that their country could be used as an arena for
score-settling between Iran and the US.
What is the Hashd?
The Hashd al Shaadi
is an Iraqi paramilitary force with close ties to Iran. It is also known as the
Popular Mobilisation Units.
The Hashd is a
network of mostly-Shia armed units, many of whom have close ties to Tehran, but
which have been officially incorporated into Iraq's state security forces.
The units joined
forces to fight Daesh group in 2014, after many of them built up years of
fighting experience during Iraq's war years, including against the US.
Strike near Baghdad
airport
Trump tweeted out a
picture of the US flag without any explanation, as the pre-dawn developments
marked the most major escalation yet in a feared proxy war between Iran and the
US on Iraqi soil.
Early Friday, a
volley of missiles hit Baghdad's international airport, striking a convoy
belonging to the Hashd al Shaabi.
Just a few hours
later, the IRGC announced Soleimani "was martyred in an attack by America
on Baghdad airport this morning."
The Hashd confirmed
both Soleimani and Muhandis were killed in what it said was a "US strike
that targeted their car on the Baghdad International Airport road."
The Pentagon said
Soleimani had been "actively developing plans to attack American diplomats
and service members in Iraq and throughout the region."
It said it took
"decisive defensive action to protect US personnel abroad by killing Qasem
Soleimani," but did not specify how.
US officials,
speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that Soleimani had been killed in
a drone strike in Baghdad.
US Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo tweeted that Iraqis are dancing in the street after
Soleimani's death.
Iran's Qasem
Soleimani killed in US strike
Soleimani was
killed in a US strike on Baghdad's international airport, Iran and the US
confirmed, in the most dramatic episode yet of escalating tensions between the
two countries.
The Pentagon said
Trump ordered Soleimani's "killing," after a pro-Iran mob this week
laid siege to the US embassy in Baghdad.
A mob of Hashd al
Shaabi supporters surrounded the US embassy on Tuesday in outrage over American
air strikes that killed 25 fighters from the network's hardline Kataib
Hezbollah faction, which is backed by Iran.
The US had acted in
response to a rocket attack days earlier that had killed an American contractor
working in Iraq.
Trump had blamed
Iran for a spate of rocket attacks targeting US forces as well as the siege at
the embassy, saying: "They will pay a very BIG PRICE! This is not a
Warning, it is a Threat."
Soleimani was a top
general in Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps and the leader of the elite Quds
Force.
He also served as
Iran's point man on Iraq, visiting the country in times of turmoil.
Hashd al Shaabi or
Iraq's paramilitary Popular Militarisation Units deputy chief Abu Mahdi al
Muhandis was also killed in the strike.
Muhandis was the
Hashd's deputy chief but widely recognised as the real shot-caller within the
group. He was also the founder of the Kataib Hezbollah.