The US air force continued to hunt down pro-Iran militia chiefs early Saturday, Jan 4, after killing their master, thus revealing America’s follow-up tactics for ridding Baghdad of Tehran’s grip. Those tactics started unfolding 24 hours earlier. Killed alongside Qassem Soleimani, the mastermind of Iran’s network of proxies, was also Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, head of the Popular Mobilization Units (PMU) the umbrella grouping of Iran’s Shiite militias in Iraq.
Since cutting down their masters, the Trump administration has clearly launched a systematic war to eliminate the militia chiefs through whom Tehran maintains its grip on Baghdad.
Early Saturday, another US air strike hit the convoy of Shebl al-Zaidi, head of the Imam Ali Battalions, near Camp Taji military compound north of Baghdad. Six people were killed, most likely including Al Zaidi and his lieutenants, according to US officials. The PMU while confirming the strike claimed it hit “a medical convoy” – evidently taken aback by the new tempo of American attacks.
Shebl al-Zaidi, reportedly one of the more vicious Shiite leaders, was jailed during the US occupation of Iraq, and has been photographed with Qassem Soleimani,
In any event, the US strike happened and it attested to the new orders issued to the US command in Iraq: go on the offensive against the pro-Iranian Iraqi militias and target them with planes, helicopters or drones whenever their leaders try moving about on the roads and highways.
These tactics spearhead the Trump administration’s preset goals:
- To end the extremist Shiite militias’ control of Baghdad and push them out to the periphery.
- To establish mainstream Iraqi government rule in the capital – initially under an American air force and military shield.
- To use the impetus created by the ending of Qassem Soleimani’s career and that of his Iraqi agent Al-Muhandis for terminating the reign of those militia chiefs and their hierarchies.
This extremely ambitious, long-term program, which relies on first-rate intelligence, is the Trump administration’s answer to the critics who claim that the high-risk assassination of Qassem Soleimani was performed without a strategy or follow-up planning.
It is most likely to be an American initiative without European coalition partners. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Friday that European allies had not been as “helpful” as he had hoped over the Soleimani killing. Later, French President Emmanuel Macron urged those involved to act with “restraint,” while British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said de-escalation would be key. “The Brits, the French, the Germans all need to understand that what we did, what the Americans did, saved lives in Europe as well,” Pompeo said.
Nonetheless, coalition spokesman Col. Myles Coggins contradicted the Pentagon’s statement about the fresh air strike on Saturday, stating, “The OIR did NOT conduct airstrikes near Camp Taji (north of Baghdad) in recent days.”
Moving forward, the Pentagon assigned a first batch of 750 extra troops to the Middle East for the protection of American personnel, to be followed by 4,000 more. DEBKAfile adds: A US brigade of 700 officers and men is on standby in Italy to fly to a military airfield made ready for its intake at Halat in north Lebanon, should it be necessary to defend the Beirut embassy against potential attack by the pro-Iran Hizballah militia of Lebanon.