US has restored 'level of deterrence' on Iran, Pentagon chief claims

Strikes against an Iraqi militia backed by Iran and the drone strike that killed top Iranian commander Qasem Soleimani have restored 'deterrence' with Iran, the US has claimed.
2 min read
09 January, 2020
Esper said continued retaliation from Iraqi militia groups was likely [AFP]
US Defence Secretary Mark Esper said on Wednesday that the Washington had re-established some deterrence toward Iran after last week's drone strike in Baghdad that killed Iranian general Qasem Soleimani.

"I think at this point with the strikes we took against KH in late December and then our actions with regard to Soleimani, I believe that we've restored a level of deterrence with them," he told reporters, referring to Kataib Hezbollah, an Iraqi militia backed by Tehran. "But we will see. Time will tell."

Esper's comments came after Iran fired a volley of ballistic missiles early on Wednesday into two bases in Iraq that house US troops, in response to the killing of Soleimani, the commander of the Iranian Republican Guards Corps' foreign arm.

No US or Iraqi personnel were killed in those strikes, and reports indicate the US was forewarned of an attack. 

The Pentagon also said its own "early warning systems" detected the incoming missiles in advance, allowing personnel to avoid injury. 

Joint Chiefs Chairman General Mark Milley dismissed suggestions that Iran did not intend to kill Americans with its missile barrage, which struck the sprawling Ain al-Asad airbase in western Iraq and a base in Erbil.

Both bases house American and other foreign troops with the US-led coalition fighting the Islamic State group. 

"I believe, based on what I saw and what I know, is that they were intended to cause structural damage, destroy vehicles and equipment and aircraft and to kill personnel. That's my own personal assessment," Milley told reporters.

"But we took sufficient defensive measures that there were no casualties to US personnel, coalition personnel, contractors or Iraqis."

Esper also downplayed the firing of two rockets into Baghdad's fortified Green Zone late Wednesday, where the US and other foreign embassies are located and many US troops are based.

"We should have some expectation that the Shia militia groups, either directed or not directed by Iran, will continue in some way, shape or form to try and undermine our presence there, either politically or, you know, take some type of kinetic actions against us or do Lord-knows-what," Esper told reporters.

Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, the deputy commander of an Iraqi network of Tehran-backed militia groups, was also killed in the strike on Soleimani last week.

Militia leaders have pledged to mete out their own response against the US for his and Soleimani's killing.


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