White House says killing of Soleimani responded to past, not imminent, attacks

President Donald Trump ordered a drone strike that killed a top Iranian military commander last month in response to past attacks, a White House Memo revealed.
3 min read
15 February, 2020
Trump ordered the strike on the Iranian commander [Getty]
The drone strike that killed Iranian military commander Qassem Soleimani was carried out in response to past attacks, the White House said in a memo released on Friday, despite the US insisting its sole purpose was to halt imminent threats.

"The President directed this action in response to an escalating series of attacks in preceding months by Iran and Iran-backed militias on US forces and interests in the Middle East region," the report to Congress said.

The memo was released by the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee just a day after the Senate passed a law to limit the president’s ability to wage war against Iran.

The memo suggested the purpose of the strike was to protect American personnel, deter Iran, degrade Iranian-backed militias’ ability to conduct attacks and "end Iran's strategic escalation of attacks".

Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee Eliot Engel said the memo contradicted Trump's previous claims that the strike prevented an imminent attack on US interests in the region.

"This spurious, after-the-fact explanation won't do. We need answers and testimony, so I look forward to Secretary (of State Mike) Pompeo testifying before the committee at an open Feb. 28 hearing on Iran and Iraq policy, including the Soleimani strike and war powers," Engel said in a statement.

The US killed Soleimani, the chief commander of Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) in a drone strike on 3 January as he was leaving Baghdad's airport.

On Friday, Iran's foreign minister said the US killing of Soleimani was a miscalculation that has had the effect of bolstering support in Iraq for the removal of American troops, a longtime goal of Tehran.

Speaking to a group of reporters on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said "the US miscalculated," noting that since the killing, thousands of Iraqis have taken to the streets to protest against the presence of foreign troops in the country.

In the immediate aftermath of the attack, in which Iraqi militia commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis was also killed, a group of Iraqi lawmakers also passed a non-binding resolution to oust US troops and since then, the issue of American troops has monopolised Iraqi politics.

Comment: US and Iran should stop holding Iraq's political sovereignty hostage

"The martyr Soleimani is much more effective than General Soleimani," Zarif said. "We are seeing that in terms of demonstrations that are taking place in Iraq against the US presence."

Zarif is expected to meet on the sidelines of the conference with German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas to talk about ongoing European efforts to preserve the nuclear deal with Iran.

The deal provides Iran economic incentives in exchange for curbs on its nuclear programme in an effort to prevent it from obtaining a nuclear bomb - something Iran insists it is not planning. Since Trump pulled Washington unilaterally out of the deal in 2018 and re-imposed sanctions, Iran's economy has been struggling. 

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In an effort to pressure the other signatories to the deal - Germany, France, Britain, Russia and China - to provide economic incentives to offset the American sanctions, Iran has slowly been violating the deal's restrictions on its nuclear program.

The US has been pressuring other members of the deal to pull out as well, but Maas told the forum that Germany rejected the US tactic of "maximum pressure" on Iran.

"We are sticking firmly to our course in the Middle East, and that is de-escalation instead of maximum pressure," he said.

Zarif reiterated Iran's stance that all of its moves to ramp-up its nuclear programme in the past few months are reversible, "providing that Europe takes steps that are meaningful".

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