Billboards
of Iran Supreme Leader in Iraq Show Increasing Iranian Influence
America's
war in Iraq had more than just moral and legal consequences.
Geopolitically, Washington handed Iraq to Iran.
26
September, 2012
Thousands
of giant billboards favorably
depicting Iran’s supreme leader are posted up throughout
neighboring Iraq, in a reminder of how much influence Iran has gained
in Iraq as a result of the US war there since 2003.
The
major geopolitical blunder of the Bush administration’s reckless
war in Iraq – aside from the moral, legal, and humanitarian
blunders – was that Iraq’s majority Shiite country came under the
influence of the region’s Shiite powerhouse Iran, which happens to
be a US foe.
The
posters of Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei were put up in Shiite
neighborhoods in Baghdad and across Iraq’s Shiite-dominated south
last month. They remain up even though they were supposed to be
temporary.
While
the Shiite dominated Iraqi leadership, headed by the dictatorial
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, use their Iranian alliance for
geopolitical reasons, the Shiite community in Iraq is not exactly
pleased with the displays of Iranian leadership.
“When
I see these pictures, I feel I am in Tehran, not Baghdad,” Asim
Salman, a Shiite and owner of a Baghdad cafe told the Associated
Press.
“Authorities
must remove these posters, which make us angry,” shining light on
the residual animosity Iraqis still feel toward Iran, with whom they
fought a brutal eight year war with in the 1980s.
Iranian
influence in Iraq is widespread and undeniable and is just one of the
many unintended consequences of the US’s murderous, failed escapade
in the country.
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