Iran warns US after Patriot deployment to Iraq
TEHRAN, Iran – Iran warned the US Wednesday that it was leading the Middle East to disaster in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic after it deployed Patriot air defense missiles to Iraq.
Washington had been in talks with Baghdad about the proposed deployment since January but it was not immediately clear whether it had secured its approval or not.
Iran, which wields huge influence over its western neighbor, said it had not.
The US deployment runs “counter to the official position of the Iraqi government, parliament and people,” a foreign ministry statement said.
It called for a halt to “warmongering during the coronavirus outbreak” and warned that US military activities in the region could lead it to “instability and disaster”.
Iran is in the throes of one of the world’s deadliest coronavirus outbreaks with more than 3,000 fatalities. The US death toll has meanwhile surpassed Iran’s, topping 4,000.
US forces should “respect the wishes of the Iraqi people and government and leave the country,” the Iranian foreign ministry added.
The Patriot is Washington’s principal anti-missile system.
Its deployment to Iraq comes after a spate of rocket and other attacks on bases and other facilities used by US personnel that Washington has blamed on Tehran-backed Shiite militias or Tehran itself.
One of the Patriot batteries was delivered to the Ain al-Asad in western Iraq last week and is now being assembled, a US defense official and an Iraqi military source said.
Ain al-Asad was hit by a retaliatory Iranian missile strike in January after Washington killed Tehran’s foreign operations chief Major General Qasem Soleimani in a drone strike just outside Baghdad airport.
A second battery was deployed to a base in Erbil, capital of the autonomous Kurdish Region.
Two more are still in Kuwait, where Washington has rear bases for its operations in Iraq, the US official said.
Iraqi leaders have resisted US deployment of the advanced weapons system for fear that it would anger Iran and further ratchet up tensions between its main allies.
On Monday, Iraq’s caretaker prime minister Adil Abdul-Mahdi warned against any “offensive military action without the approval of the Iraqi government.” He did not specifically mention the Patriot deployment.