Iraqi
Jets Strike Terrorists In Syria At Assad's Request As US "Slowing"
Troop Pullout
01/01/2019
As
the United States is reportedly "slowing things down" on
Trump's announced full troop withdrawal, Syria's President Assad is
apparently speeding things up in terms of reasserting sovereign
control over all parts of the country, as he's long promised to
"liberate every inch" of natural Syria.
On
Sunday Assad took the
controversial step of authorizing Iraqi forces to
attack terror targets inside Syria at will, according to state-run
SANA "without
waiting for permission from authorities in Damascus" while
the two allies coordinate action against remaining ISIS pockets in
the country's east.
Quickly
on the heels of that decision, Iraqi
fighters jets bombed ISIS positions across the Syrian border on
Monday.
According to official
reports,
"Iraq's Joint Operations Command said F-16s struck a two-storey
house in Souseh, close to the border, that was being used as a
meeting place for ISIS leaders."
Unconfirmed reports say
up to two dozen or more ISIS commanders were taken out in the air
strikes as a high level meeting had been taking place at one of the
locations targeted.
Since
Trump's Syria pullout announcement, Pentagon leaders have expressed
concern over who will fill the remaining power vacuum in Syria's
north and east, and have especially feared Iranian entrenchment as a
result, as well as the
potential of Iraqi Shia pro-Iran militias to fill the gap.
Indeed
Monday's Iraqi air strikes suggest it is precisely Baghdad — which
is ironically
an ally of both Iran and the United States, and increasingly of
Damascus — which
is already stepping up operations while the US is set to move out.
According
to the Dubai-based The
National,
Iraqi leaders hope for even closer cooperation with the Assad
government in counter-terror efforts, something sure to trigger
alarm bells in Washington and Tel Aviv:
Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi said Iraq is seeking to move beyond its current arrangement with Damascus — under which it launches air strikes against ISIS militants in the neighbouring country after getting approval — but did not offer further details.
“There are groups operating in Syria, and Iraq is the best way to deal with this,” he told reporters in reference to ISIS remnants.
Thus Baghdad
is eyeing a larger role in the neighboring war-torn country even
beyond having been given carte blanche for cross border air strikes.
This
will be met with a desire for active and extreme push back in
Washington, resulting in further tensions with Baghdad, as the
entirety of America's Syria policy throughout the war has been
driven by fears of the so-called "Shia crescent" or Iranian
land bridge which
would conceivably connect Tehran
with the Mediterranean in a continuous arch of influence via Baghdad,
Damascus, and Lebanon, where Iran-backed Hezbollah exercises
unrivaled power and influence.
Indeed
with the Iraqi Air Force now fully operational over eastern Syria,
this feared "land bridge" is already a reality, and
will give greater impetus to neocons like Senator Lindsey
Graham currently
trying to persuade President
Trump to walk back or at least greatly slow down the planned US troop
withdrawal.
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