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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
1/4/2020 4:47:07 PM

Will Iran’s Response to the Soleimani Strike Lead to War?

What Tehran Is Likely to Do Next

Soleimani in Tehran, Iran, 2016Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader

Qasem Soleimani, commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Force, was one of the most influential and popular figures in the Islamic Republic and a particular nemesis of the United States. He led Iran’s campaign to arm and train Shiite militias in Iraq—militias responsible for the deaths of an estimated 600 American troops from 2003 to 2011— and became the chief purveyor of Iranian political influence in Iraq thereafter, most notably through his efforts to fight the Islamic State (ISIS). He drove Iran’s policies to arm and support Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, including by deploying an estimated 50,000 Shiite militia fighters to Syria. He was the point man for Iran’s relationship with Hezbollah in Lebanon, helping to supply the group with missiles and rockets to threaten Israel. He drove Iran’s strategy to arm the Houthis in Yemen. For all these reasons and more, Soleimani was a cult hero in Iran and across the region.

In short, the United States has taken a highly escalatory step in assassinating one of the most important and powerful men in the Middle East.

The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump argues that Soleimani was a terrorist and that assassinating him was a defensive action that stopped an imminent attack. Both of those assertions may or may not be true, but the United States would never have felt compelled to act against the Iranian general if not for the reckless policy the administration has pursued since it came into office. In May 2018, Trump left the Iran nuclear agreement and adopted a “maximum pressure” policy of economic sanctions on Iran. For a year, Iran responded with restraint in an effort to isolate the United States diplomatically and win economic concessions from other parties to the nuclear agreement.

But the restrained approach failed to yield material benefits. By May 2019, Tehran had chosen instead to breach the agreement and escalate tensions across the region. First came Iranian mine attacks against international shipping in May and June. Then Iran shot down a U.S. drone, nearly touching off an open conflict with the United States. In September, Iranian missiles struck the Abqaiq facility in Saudi Arabia—arguably the most important piece of oil infrastructure in the world. Shiite militia groups began launching rockets at U.S. bases in Iraq, ultimately leading to the death of an American contractor last week. Retaliatory U.S. strikes eventually brought us to the Soleimani assassination.

Policemen protest the assassination of Soleimani in Tehran, Iran, January 2020Nazanin Tabatabaee / Wana News Agency

The most important question now is how will Iran respond. The Islamic Republic’s behavior over the past few months and over its long history suggests that it may not rush to retaliate. Rather, it will carefully and patiently choose an approach that it deems effective, and it will likely try to avoid an all-out war with the United States. Nonetheless, the events of the past few days demonstrate that the risk of miscalculation is incredibly high. Soleimani clearly didn’t believe that the United States was going to dramatically escalate or he wouldn’t have left himself so vulnerable, only a stone’s throw away from U.S. military forces in Iraq. For his part, Trump has been adamant about his lack of interest in starting a new war in the Middle East—and yet, here we are at the precipice.

The United States must, at a minimum, expect to find itself in conflict with Shiite militias in Iraq that will target U.S. forces, diplomats, and civilians. Iraq is the theater where the U.S. strike took place and therefore the most rational place for Iran to immediately respond. Moreover, the militia groups have already been escalating their activities over the past six months. They are among Iran’s most responsive proxies and will be highly motivated, given that Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, one of their top commanders, was killed in the strike along with Soleimani.

Whether a U.S. presence in Iraq is still viable remains an open question. The security situation, which has certainly now been complicated, is not the only problem. The assassination was such an extreme violation of Iraqi sovereignty—done unilaterally, without Iraqi government consent—that Iraqi officials will come under tremendous political pressure to eject U.S. forces. Many Iraqis have no love for either the United States or Iran. They just want to have their country back to themselves and fear being put in the middle of a U.S.-Iranian confrontation. The current situation could turn into a worst-case scenario for these citizens.

But a chaotic U.S. withdrawal under fire could also present real dangers. The mission to counter ISIS remains a going concern, and if the United States is forced to leave Iraq, that effort could suffer a serious blow. ISIS retains an underground presence and could take advantage of the chaos of an American withdrawal or a U.S.-Iranian conflict to improve its position in Iraq.

The repercussions of the assassination won’t necessarily be confined to Iraq. Lebanese Hezbollah, which enjoys a close relationship with Iran and is likely to be responsive to Iranian requests, could attack American targets in Lebanon. Even if Iran decides to avoid a major escalation in Lebanon, Hezbollah operatives are distributed throughout the Middle East and could attack the United States elsewhere in the region. Alternatively, Hezbollah may choose to launch missile attacks on Israeli territory, although this response is less likely. Hezbollah wants to avoid an all-out war with Israel that would devastate Lebanon, and the Trump administration has publicly taken credit for killing Soleimani, increasing the likelihood that a retaliatory strike will target the United States directly.

Iran could conduct missile strikes against U.S. bases in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates or against oil facilities in the Gulf. The accuracy of Iran’s missile strikes on the Abqaiq oil facility in September took the United States and the rest of the world by surprise, although Iran did purposefully attempt to keep the attack limited and symbolic. In the current climate, Iran could choose to become much more aggressive, calculating that in the arena of missile strikes it has been highly successful in landing blows while avoiding retaliation over the past six months.

We should also expect Iran to significantly accelerate its nuclear program. Since the Trump administration left the Iran nuclear agreement in May 2018, Iran has been quite restrained in its nuclear response. After a year of staying in the deal, in May 2019, Iran began to incrementally violate the agreement by taking small steps every 60 days. The next 60-day window ends next week, and it is hard to imagine restraint in the wake of Soleimani’s death. At a minimum, Iran will restart enriching uranium to 19.75 percent, a significant step toward weapons-grade uranium. It has recently threatened to go even further by walking away from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty or kicking out inspectors. These would be profoundly dangerous moves, and until this week most analysts believed Tehran was unlikely to actually make them. Now they may well be on the table.

Perhaps the most provocative thing Iran could do is carry out a terrorist attack on the U.S. homeland or attempt to kill a senior U.S. official of Soleimani’s stature. This would be much more challenging for Iran to pull off than an attack on U.S. interests or personnel overseas but may be deemed by Iran as appropriately proportional. The last time Iran is known to have attempted an attack in the United States was in 2011, when American law enforcement and intelligence agencies foiled a plot to assassinate the Saudi ambassador in Washington by blowing up a restaurant. In that case, the plot was detected early on and easily foiled because of poor Iranian tradecraft. The episode suggested that Iran is much less capable outside the Middle East than inside it, an assessment that is buttressed by foiled Iranian bombing attempts in Denmark and France this year. So while Iran may try to conduct an attack inside the United States, it would need to get lucky to succeed.

If the Trump administration is smart, it will do all that it can to harden U.S. facilities and protect Americans while absorbing some of the inevitable blows to come. It should also reach out to Iran through U.S. partners that have good relations with the country, such as Oman, to try to de-escalate while also setting clear redlines in private to avoid an Iranian miscalculation. Finally, Trump should be satisfied to declare victory and boast that he got the upper hand on Iran by killing Soleimani—not take further military actions. But this type of restraint appears to run counter to Trump’s very nature. And even if he shows uncharacteristic self-restraint in the coming weeks, the desire for revenge in Iran, and the political momentum that desire is already beginning to generate, may inevitably draw the United States and Iran into a major conflict.




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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
1/6/2020 6:46:14 PM
"Fastest way to unify Iranians of all walks of life against you is to threaten to destroy their cultural heritage."

By Jake Johnson | CommonDreams.org | Creative Commons

Iranians Cultural Sites

(CD) — Ordinary Iranians responded to U.S. President Donald Trump’s monstrous threat to strike sites “important to Iran and the Iranian culture” with an outpouring of photos highlighting their favorite mosques, museums, monuments, and other stunning architecture.

“Fastest way to unify all political factions in Iran against you is to assassinate the general who led Iran’s fight against ISIS,” tweeted Independent correspondent Negar Mortazavi. “Fastest way to unify Iranians of all walks of life against you is to threaten to destroy their cultural heritage. Trump did both this week.”

Using the hashtag #IranianCulturalSites, Iranians flooded Twitter with hundreds of photos of locations and structures imbued with personal and historical significance:

“Iranian cultural sites aren’t only aesthetically awe-inspiring or visually pleasing, these sites are home to thought, dialogue, and life,” said writer Neda Monem. “Precisely why a strike on a cultural site goes far beyond, and does not merely translate into, the demolition of a man-made structure.”

“Fastest way to unify all political factions in Iran against you is to assassinate the general who led Iran’s fight against ISIS,” tweeted Independent correspondent Negar Mortazavi. “Fastest way to unify Iranians of all walks of life against you is to threaten to destroy their cultural heritage. Trump did both this week.”

Using the hashtag #IranianCulturalSites, Iranians flooded Twitter with hundreds of photos of locations and structures imbued with personal and historical significance:

The Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque on Imam Square (Meidan-e Emam) in the Iranian city of Isfahan. (Photo: Thomas Schulze/Picture Alliance via Getty Images)


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
1/7/2020 7:16:45 PM

European diplomats scramble to cool tensions in Iran-U.S. conflict

"The Trump administration stands alone, which explains why none of the E.U. governments were consulted about [Soleimani's] killing,” one analyst said.


Mourners pay homage to Gen. Qassem Soleimani in Tehran on Monday. Atta Kenare / AFP - Getty Images



LONDON — European diplomats were hard at work Monday trying to ratchet down tensions between Iran and the United States after the U.S. killed a top Iranian military commander in Iraq last week, raising fears of all-out war in the Middle East.

But as President Donald Trump threatened to attack cultural sites in Iran if Tehran retaliates for the killing of Gen. Qassem Soleimani, some questioned whether a diplomatic solution to the crisis was still possible.

Iran vowed revenge after Soleimani was killed in a drone strike in Baghdad, and on Sunday announced that it was going to abandon limitations on enriching uranium that were negotiated under the 2015 nuclear deal, which the U.S. withdrew from in 2018.

Shortly after Iran’s announcement, the leaders of France, Britain and Germany called on Tehran to refrain "from further violent action" and reverse all measures inconsistent with the nuclear deal.

In a joint statement, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson called on all parties involved to exercise “utmost restraint and responsibility."

The three European powers also emphasized their readiness to talk to Iran directly.

“We stand ready to continue our engagement with all sides in order to contribute to defuse tensions and restore stability to the region,” the statement said. The trio were expected to discuss the situation on Monday.

Separately, E.U.’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, invited Iranian Foreign Affairs Minister Javad Zarif to Brussels to discuss the crisis.

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said in a statement Sunday that Europe had "reliable channels of communication" to all sides. "We will definitely talk to Iran again,” Maas told Deutschlandfunk radio Monday.

The European powers also seem to be in disagreement with Trump about his threat to impose sanctions on Iraq after its Parliament voted Sunday to end the U.S. military presence in the country.

Threatening Iraq with sanctions is "not very helpful," Maas said Monday. “I think the right way is to convince Iraq not with threats but with arguments."

Iran said it would continue to cooperate with the U.N. nuclear watchdog and could quickly reverse its latest steps if U.S. sanctions are removed.

“Iran still values the European efforts or at least they recognize the importance of having international sympathy and they have been pretty good at exploiting that sympathy since the U.S. withdrawal" from the 2015 nuclear deal, said Sanam Vakil, senior research fellow with Middle East & North Africa Programme at Chatham House, a think tank in London.

She said Iran's declaration on Sunday that it would abandon the limits set by the 2015 nuclear deal was a “relatively measured response designed to keep the door of diplomacy, discussion and engagement with Europe very open.”

Both Trump and the Iranians are very much backed into a corner in the wake of Soleimani's death, Vakil said, adding that she believed both sides were still looking for a diplomatic outlet.

“The Iranians have to respond to Soleimani’s killing. It would be very hard for them not to because of the symbolism of the way he was killed and his importance," she said. “Meanwhile, the U.S. president has not retreated or desisted from his statements, but continues to stand by them and double down when they are just inflammatory.”

“Having the international community lobby and pressure President Trump is an important part of Iran’s strategy right now,” Vakil added.

"In continental Europe, public opinion is clearly opposed to war, and no politician that seeks reelection would jeopardize their fortunes by beating the war drums against a country such as Iran,” Arshin Adib-Moghaddam, professor at the School for Oriental and African Studies in London, said. “So the Trump administration stands alone, which explains why none of the E.U. governments were consulted about [Soleimani's] killing.”

Other international powers have voiced their concerns about rising tensions.

Both Turkey and Saudi Arabia said via their foreign ministers Monday that they want a de-escalation of tensions while NATO ambassadors will be gathering in Brussels for an urgent meeting.

China has criticized the United States for aggravating tension in the Middle East and urged all parties to exercise restraint to ensure peace and stability. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe also called for peace, urging nations involved to make diplomatic efforts to ease tensions.

The Kremlin said Monday that Russian President Vladimir Putin will discuss the brewing crisis with Merkel when the two meet in Moscow this week. Germany and Russia are among the world powers that have been trying to salvage the 2015 nuclear deal.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, one of the strongest supporters of Trump’s decision to target Soleimani, said the American president "deserves every appreciation" for acting with determination.

Netanyahu has pushed hard for tougher measures against Iran for years and advocated against the nuclear deal with Tehran.


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
1/8/2020 5:26:13 PM

Iran latest: What are the chances of WW3 starting?

WORLD WAR 3 fears have escalated since top Iranian General Qassem Soleimani was assassinated in a US drone strike last Friday. What are the chances of World War 3 starting?

Iran latest: What are the chances of WW3 starting? (Image: Getty)

Since the commander’s death, fears of a worldwide conflict have been ignited with incendiary statements made by Iranian politicians and President Trump.

The Iranian Revolutionary Guards, who were commanded by General Soleimani, threatened violent retaliation when Amir Hatami, also a top commander of the elite Quds, said: “A crushing revenge will be taken for Soleimani’s unjust assassination. We will take revenge from all those involved and responsible for his assassination.”

The Iranian Foreign Minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, called the killing an act of US terrorism and said the “US bears responsibility for all the consequences of its rogue adventurism.”

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to whom General Soleimani reported to directly, said: “All enemies should know that the jihad of resistance will continue with a doubled motivation, and a definite victory awaits the fighters in the holy war.”

On Wednesday morning, Iran’s retaliation for General Soleimani’s death began with missile strikes on US airbases.

More than a dozen ballistic missiles launched from Iran hit two air bases in Irbil and Al Asad, west of Baghdad, and it’s unclear if there have been any casualties.

The bases, which house US and coalition troops, were targeted a matter of hours after General Soleimani was buried in his hometown.

President Trump tweeted that “all was well” and that casualties and damage were being investigated.

Supreme Leader Khamenei called the attack was “a slap in the face” for the US and said: “When it comes to confrontation, military action of this kind is not enough. What is important is that the corrupt presence of the United States should come to an end.


Iran latest: What are the chances of WW3 starting?

Iraqi security forces find and collect the pieces of missiles as they gather to inspect the site after Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) targeted Ain al-Asad airbase in Iraq, a facility jointly operated by U.S. and Iraqi forces, at Bardarash district of Erbil in Iraq (Image: Al-Baghdadi township/Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty)

Iran latest: What are the chances of WW3 starting?

President Trump tweeted that “all was well” and that casualties and damage were being investigated. (Image: Getty)

Iran also said it will not be respecting the restrictions laid out in the 2015 nuclear accord and has continued its uranium enrichment “with no limitations and based on its technical needs”.

President Trump responded in all capital letters tweet when he wrote: “IRAN WILL NEVER HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON!”

The US, who withdrew from the nuclear agreement in May 2018, said it killed General Soleimani because he “was actively developing plans to attack American diplomats and service members in Iraq and throughout the region”.

And after the threats of retaliation from Iran, he wrote: “We are the biggest and by far the BEST in the World!


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"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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