Archive for the ‘Iraq’ Category

Why did the US stupidly invade Iraq in 2003? A remarkable new book is the most exhaustive look yet. – Mondoweiss

TO START A WARHow the Bush Administration Took America Into IraqBy Robert DraperPenguin Press, 480 pp., $30

Robert Draper is a veteran journalist and a staff reporter at the New York Times magazine. He has just published a comprehensive look at how the U.S. decided to invade Iraq in 2003. His stunning, thorough account is based largely on interviews with some 300 people, including just about all the major figures except George W. Bush himself. So why did the New York Times Book Review assign only an 11-paragraph review, which it buried on page 15? Especially as Drapers study is not only historically indispensable, but is also an up-to-date warning that the U.S. could be tricked into a war with Iran, with some of the same culprits responsible?

Quite possibly, Times editors were embarrassed by Drapers Chapter 17, Truth and the Tellers, which is a brilliant dissection of how the mainstream U.S. media, including his own paper, joined in the drumbeat for war. Draper points out that Times reporter Judith Miller, who was eventually professionally disgraced for reporting false stories about Iraqs (non-existent) weapons of mass destruction leaked by pro-war Bush officials, was actually something of a scapegoat. The papers top brass, including executive editor Howell Raines, encouraged her and others, while sidelining skeptical reports by different reporters. Draper notes that Miller was certainly not responsible for the [articles] written by her colleagues that the Times editors decided not to publish.

He writes that the poor coverage was not universal. Knight-Ridder reporter Warren Strobel and his colleagues did write reports skeptical of the administrations dishonest claims about Iraqs weapons. But the Knight-Ridder papers were

. . . not situated in the Beltway and not driving Washingtons daily narrative. . . while the reporters at the Times were ever conscious of their status in the top echelon. . . Careers could be made by wars. It was equally true that wars could be made by careerists, including those in newsrooms.

How much of a role did Israel, or pro-Israel neoconservatives, play in the rush toward invasion? Draper points out that Douglas Feith, an undersecretary in Donald Rumsfelds Defense Department, was vigorous and influential. Right after the September 11, 2001 attacks, Feith immediately looked for (non-existent) links between the hijackers and Saddam Hussein. Draper explains:

Feith, whose father had been a committed Zionist and whose grandparents had been murdered in concentration camps, was an ardent supporter of Israel and believed Saddam to be that countrys greatest foe.

Draper reports that Israel surely did form part of George W. Bushs pro-invasion calculations. His fathers Secretary of State, Jim Baker, had warned: Those neocons are going to eat George W. alive. The only one who could protect him would be (Secretary of State Colin) Powell. But Powell doesnt know his own strength. Hes the good soldier. And Bush Junior himself had told British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw that my dad got burned by the Israeli lobby in 1992, and I dont want to fall into the same trap.

But Douglas Feith and other neoconservative zealots were not the ultimate deciders. Draper concludes that George W. Bush decided early on that he wanted to attack Iraq, for a complex mix of motivations that also included his compulsion to strike back somewhere after September 11, and because he blamed Saddam Hussein for (allegedly) planning to assassinate his father back in 1993. The officials around Bush recognized the presidents bellicose inclinations, and they chose cowardice, rigging the intelligence to tell Bush what he wanted to hear. Many of them later confessed to Draper that although they had doubts, they had stayed quiet. Draper put it diplomatically

Though the decision was finally his and only his to make, it will never be known what George W. Bushs course of action would have been if, during the spring, summer, and fall months of 2002, even one member of his administration had tested his professed receptiveness to an argument against war.

The high-level cowardly group-think prompted some astonishing incompetence. At least the idea that Iraq would turn out to have hidden weapons of mass destruction was plausible, if not backed by any proof. But the invaders made ridiculous mistakes that ended up being lethal. First, the majority of Bushs advisers decided that an exile named Ahmad Chalabi should lead the new Iraq after Saddam was overthrown, (and a surprising number of journalists joined the Chalabi fan club). It is a mystery how sentient adults could have believed that this man, accurately regarded by many others who met him as a charlatan, who had been charged with bank embezzlement in Jordan, and who had not been in Iraq for nearly half a century, could preside over reconstruction.

It got worse. Draper reports in detail how the Bush administrations invaders made no plans for administering post-war Iraq. Within weeks, they replaced their first pro-consul, Jay Garner with L. Paul (Jerry) Bremer, a bureaucrat who, Draper points out dryly, had no work experience in the Middle East. Bremer promptly made the fatal decision to disband the Iraqi army in one fell swoop putting 350,000 armed Iraqi men out of work. The Iraqi resistance naturally began almost immediately. So far, 4,583 American service men and women, and at least 288,000 Iraqi people, have paid with their lives for the Bush administrations incompetence.

The Iraq tragedy is relevant today. On September 14, Donald Trump made up a new threat from Iran, and tweeted: Any attack by Iran, in any form, against the United States will be met by an attack on Iran that will be 1,000 times greater in magnitude! Trump sounds unhinged until you recall that just this January, he provocatively ordered the assassination of Irans General Qasem Soleimani and got little resistance from either the mainstream U.S. press or the foreign policy establishment. Cowardly group-think didnt end with Iraq.

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Why did the US stupidly invade Iraq in 2003? A remarkable new book is the most exhaustive look yet. - Mondoweiss

Iraq’s New Government: What to Know – Council on Foreign Relations

After months of protests and a series of failed attempts to form a government, Iraq has a new prime minister: Mustafa al-Kadhimi. Kadhimis supporters hope he can unite Iraqs many factions, but he faces a host of challenges, including navigating thorny relationships with the United States and Iran, dealing with corruption and ongoing militia violence, and managing the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

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A massive anti-government protest movement took off in October 2019, condemning an authoritarian government, corruption, poor public services, and perceived sectarian policies of the previous prime minister, Adel Abdul-Mahdi. Turmoil reigned after Madhi resigned in late 2019, as the first two replacements named by President Barham Salih both failed to form a coalition government. Salih then appointed Kadhimi, who took office in May 2020.

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Kadhimi spurred a burst of optimism by managing to form a coalition government that brought together groups from across the political spectrum: Kurdish, Sunni, and Shiite parties, including the large bloc led by popular cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.

Born in 1967, Kadhimi spent decades working as a journalist and activist documenting human rights abuses under the Saddam Hussein regime. Starting in 2016, he led the countrys intelligence service during the governments battle against the self-proclaimed Islamic State. In that role, he forged relationships with many of the foreign powers that have long vied for influence over Baghdad, including the United States, Iran, and Saudi Arabia.

His government won support in parliament, as well as relatively high public approval, based on his reputation as a pragmatist who can balance competing forces at home and abroad. However, Kadhimiunlike many of his predecessorsdoes not belong to a political party or control his own militia, which observers say leaves him vulnerable. He wants to bring all Iraqis together, but he doesnt have a political base of his own, says Robert Ford, the U.S. deputy ambassador to Iraq from 2008 to 2010. He will always be dependent on these other political parties.

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Severalcritical issues on the domestic front could undermine Kadhimis government.

Rampant corruption. Kadhimi promised protesters that he would disband the deeply unpopular muhasasa[PDF], the ethnoreligious quota system that defines Iraqi politics. Under this informal arrangement, the president comes from the Kurdish minority, the speaker of the parliament from the Sunni Arab minority, and the prime minister from the Shiite majority. Influential ministry posts are divided among the countrys religious groups. Experts say the system contributes to entrenched corruption in Iraq, which ranks as one of the most corrupt countries in the world. But after the Iran-backed Fatah bloc threatened to veto his candidacy, Kadhimi mostly backed down on this reform. As a result, corruption continues to siphon off government funds and delay infrastructure projects, limiting widespread access to essential services such as electricity and clean water.

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COVID-19 pandemic. In spite of lockdown measures, Iraq suffered a spike in cases of the new coronavirus disease, COVID-19, in late June, increasing stress on its precarious health-care system and exacerbating youth unemployment, which surpassed 25 percent in 2019. The pandemic has also caused a sharp decline in the price of oil, which accounts for more than 90 percent of Iraqs government revenue. This further undermines the fledgling governments legitimacy, as militias have stepped in to supply medical and humanitarian services.

Powerful militias. Even as the Islamic State threat has receded, Iraq remains home to an array of armed militias with different allegiances, including the Iran-backed Popular Mobilization Forces, the Kurdish Peshmerga, and various tribal groups. Kadhimi has taken steps to rein them in, including a June raid against the Shiite militia group Kataib Hezbollah, which the government accuses of several rocket attacks against U.S. forces. But the assassination of Kadhimi advisor Hisham al-Hashimi in July, also attributed to Kataib Hezbollah, suggests that the militias are unafraid to hit back at assertions of government authority.

Escalating U.S.-Iran tensions under President Donald J. Trump have caused concern in Baghdad that conflict could spill into Iraq. Both the January 2020 assassination of Irans top military commander, Qassem Soleimani, and retaliatory attacks by Iran against a U.S. military base took place on Iraqi soil.

Kadhimi is under pressure by both sides. The United States, which maintains several thousand troops in Iraq to support and train the countrys army, currently pursues two main interests there: containing the remnant of the Islamic State and reducing Irans influence. Trump has put pressure on Baghdad to decrease economic ties with Iran, such as by reducing its natural gas imports. However, Iraq relies on that energy for its electricity. At the same time, Tehran has pressured Kadhimi not to boosteconomic ties with Irans rivals among the Gulf states. Iranian influence runs through majority-Shiite Iraq, largely by way of Tehrans support for political parties and militias. It remains to be seen if Kadhimi can strike a balance between the competing demands of the two powers.

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Iraq's New Government: What to Know - Council on Foreign Relations

Top General in Middle East Says U.S. Troop Levels Will Drop in Iraq and Syria – The New York Times

But the Islamic State in Iraq is still able to wage a low-tech, low-cost, largely rural and lethal campaign, American and Iraqi counterterrorism officials say. While ISIS has not carried out attacks on the scale that it did a few years ago, the number of attacks has begun to grow again.

The Pentagon is reluctant to keep more than the absolute minimum of troops in Iraq because they have been attacked by Iranian-backed militias. An attack on an Iraqi base in March killed three soldiers of the American-led military coalition there, two of them Americans, and wounded 14.

In March, the Pentagon ordered military commanders to plan for an escalation of American combat in Iraq. But the top American commander in the country warned that such a campaign could be bloody and counterproductive and risked war with Iran.

Since then, the United States has consolidated its troops on fewer bases, a repositioning that General McKenzie acknowledged had diverted resources from fighting ISIS. Separately, the training mission has been suspended for the past several months because of concerns about the coronavirus.

General McKenzie praised the government of the new Iraqi prime minister, Mustafa al-Kadhimi, for its initial efforts to counter Iranian-backed Shiite militias that periodically lob rockets at American troops and personnel, noting that U.S. officials must exercise patience with the new governments fits and starts.

Were trying to do everything we can not to inflame the environment in Iraq, the general said, in an apparent reference to the killing of one of Irans top generals, Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, in an American drone strike at Baghdad International Airport in January. That strike enraged many Iraqi parliamentarians, who demanded a complete withdrawal of American troops from the country.

In northeast Syria, American troops are working closely with the Kurdish allies, the Syrian Democratic Forces, to combat pockets of ISIS fighters. General McKenzie said the insurgents had been limited to carrying out local sporadic violence east of the Euphrates River, territory controlled by American and U.S.-backed Kurdish forces.

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Top General in Middle East Says U.S. Troop Levels Will Drop in Iraq and Syria - The New York Times

What the Iraq War Can Teach the Climate Movement – Gizmodo

A giant black cloud of burning oil rises behind a U.S. Army soldier in August 2003.Photo: Scott Nelson (Getty Images)

I was in middle school when the George W. Bush administration began stoking the flames of war with Iraq in 2003. I watched as TV newscasters and government officials shouted about the need to restore order in the country, alleging that the Iraqi government had weapons of mass destruction and claiming violent intervention was the only solution.

Around this time, my brother scrawled NO BLOOD FOR OIL on a white undershirt and staged a walkout at his high school. He spent weeks frantically informing everyone who would listen, including his bewildered 11-year-old sister, that the whole narrative was merely a cover for the U.S. politicians trying to gain control of Iraqs vast petroleum reserves.

Now, Im reliving all that and more again as an adult. Blowback, a new podcast hosted by journalist Noah Kulwin and former Chapo Trap House producer Brendan James, details the lurid history of Iraq War. Its a gripping, thorough account of what Kulwin and James call the greatest crime of the 21st century. The show also puts the 2003 invasion in historical context and how the war shaped the U.S. oil industry and politics more broadly.

In reliving 2003, its also clear that Blowback is unfortunately all too relevant today. As a climate reporter, I write about the U.S. governments allegiance to the oil industry all the time. Ive seethed about how fossil fuel executives knowingly continue to fuel the deadly climate crisis, how their operations massively harm poor communities around the U.S. and world, and how our elected leaders prioritize oil, gas, and coal profits over the interests of the majority of people across the U.S.

But of course, oil companies plunder isnt limited to its massive contributions to the climate crisis and pollution. The industry, and the U.Ss continued quest for energy domination, is also built on a history of violence of which the Iraq War is one chapter. Earther spoke with Kulwin and James about the new show, corporate conquest, and what lessons it holds for the climate movement at this pivotal moment, one thats still haunted by 2003. This interview has been lightly edited for clarity.

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Earther: What are the biggest things youve learned from making this podcast?

Noah Kulwin: What was that Epstein tweet that said, some of our faves may be implicated? [Editors note:heres the tweet from Christine Pelosi, the Calfornia Democratic Party chair] If youre somebody who has anything invested in American culture or politicians, prepare to be extremely disappointed about what they will do in a moment of crisis. People we think of as mainstream Democrats, including the nominee for president, were strong supporters of the war.

Brendan James: I guess one lesson would be, when it comes to war, when it comes to controlling natural resources, dont give them an inch or theyll take a mile. Theyre always building cases for why this is a good idea. There will always be a reasonable seeming argument, a soft-toned argument, about why we need to intervene in Venezuela [which is one of the worlds largest exporters of oil] to stop a dictatorship thats threatening stability in the region or something. We need to see through that kind of thing. We need a radical break with those kinds of American politics.

Earther: Just two weeks ago, temperatures in Iraq shot up to 127 degrees Fahrenheit in parts of the country. Because of ongoing electricity grid issues, a lot of people were forced to bear that heat with limited or no access to air conditioning. When people held protests in the street, two were killed by security forces. Blowback explains that U.S. intervention had a massive role in destabilizing Iraqs electricity, even before the 2003 invasion. Could you talk about that? Who gained from that destabilization?

Kulwin: Yeah, the recent heat wave has brought thousands of people across the country into the streets. And a lot of the people worst affected by the heat wave were in the marshlands in the southern part of Iraq. Well, people in the marshlands were persecuted by Saddam Hussein. The marshlands were drained to punish marsh Arabs who resisted Husseins rule in the 90s. That basically created climate refugees. Hot conditions have persisted in that region, and obviously now with climate change, that is becoming much more severe.

With heat, a countrys ability to manage and respond and keep people cool rests on its ability for its electrical system to function. But as part of the Gulf War, the U.S. basically destroyed and bombed the Iraqi electrical system back into the Stone Age. The purpose of that was ultimately to give the U.S. more leverage over Iraq in the sanctions that would impose over the course of the 90s to try essentially beat Saddam Hussein into submission.

When the U.S. invaded back in 2003, Iraqs electricity grid and the quality of the system and its infrastructure, had improved from where it was in 1991 when it was blown out by the Americans, but it still was not 100%, and the Americans totally brought it back even further into the past. Even today, its not like power is regularly supplied to everybody in the country. A lot of that is a function of American policy that goes back 20 years.

James: As we quote in the show, there are Washington Post quotes from Pentagon officials and Air Force guys who said, our job is not to help rebuild Iraq after the war. Our job is to bring the country to its knees. They wanted the maximum amount of leverage to extract whatever they wanted from this country just lost a war to them. They wanted the most difficult possible conditions for regular people in Iraq after Iraq messed with the U.S.

Then they also tied lifting sanctions needed to repair that infrastructure with Saddam stepping down, obliterating any reason for him to cooperate with the U.S. over sanctions at all. He was never going to voluntarily kick himself out of his own country.

In the beginning of the 2003 war, we knocked out the electricity grid pretty early. And then, in this kind of repulsive irony, the Americans took over Iraqs electricity grid. After intentionally battering the infrastructure of this country, now we were in charge of putting it back up. During the first few years of the occupation, America struggled to get it to even pre-war conditions. People on the streets of Baghdad and elsewhere would say, Saddam was a bit of a prick, but at least he got the electricity running again.

Kulwin: And of course, in civil society, all things rest on the electricity grid and water system, both of which were destroyed. Without good electricity, Iraq sees everything from more infant mortality to high general population death rates. Chronic electricity shortages take a substantial toll.

James: This is a story about what was once a hypermodern country in the region. Before intervention, Iraq was by no means perfect, but it was quite modern and progressive comparatively. Americans worked, first sometimes with Saddam and eventually of course against Saddam, to undo all that progress. So now, when we see headlines about Baghdads heat wave and electricity, we should remember that these problems didnt come out of Iraqis inability to manage their affairs or run their state. It came from all of these war crimes and policies that were very deliberate by America.

Earther: Despite the insistence from officials, Blowback makes clear these war crimes werent about promoting democracy. What were they for? And to what extent was this a war waged for oil?

James: The short answer and the one that you saw with the protest signs that said no blood for oil is that American invaded Iraq because it had the second largest oil reserves in the region.

But to what extent the war was to profit off of a newly acquired Iraqi oil industry is a more of an interesting question. It certainly was the main reason why we targeted Iraq, not even just with the Iraq War in 2003 but in 1991. The reason that Iraq could even be in the position to piss America off was because we had made friends with it due to its status as a strong oil producer and its strategic position against Iran, another very strong oil producer.

But then if you look at what actually happened, the Bush administration and its allies failed to privatize the Iraqi oil sector. It was an ambition to basically turn it into a fully open and revitalized industry for the highest bidders in the international market. That did not happen. Iraqs oil industry to this very day is still state-owned. Thats not for lack of trying. But Iraqi politicians were not about to hand over the thing that made up 99% of Iraqs economy. That was their only bargaining chip.

But what the Iraqi state oil sector did do is enter into multibillion dollar contracts around with giants like Exxon Mobil, Total Oil, Chevron in order to develop the state sector Iraqs oil reserves. Thats still an incredibly profitable payday for friends of oil like George W Bush, Dick Cheney, and Condoleeza Rice.

Its a neo-colonial process where the U.S. can say Iraq has sovereignty and it has its own political institutions, when in fact, all of that is guided by a very heavy American hand that leads them to do business with the big American firms.

Earther: In addition to the push to privatize the oil reserves, Blowback details the push to privatize war itselfto bring far more private contractors into the military sector. How did the fight to privatize war intersect with the fight to privatize natural resources? And how did those same kinds of conflicts of interest play into that?

Kulwin: The privatization of the U.S. army during this time was a change in the labor structure of federal contracting. Previously, a role that would have gone to the Army or federal institutions went to private institutions. This didnt save the U.S. money; in fact it was more costly. But this was part of an effort that Donald Rumsfeld spun when he was Secretary of Defense, he said he wanted to make the Defense Department more nimble.

Of course, one obvious conflict of interest was Dick Cheney and Halliburton. Cheney had previously been the chairman and CEO of Halliburton. Between 2000 and 2003, Halliburton went from being the 22nd largest government contractor to the seventh largest government contractor. Cheney was paid almost $2 million during this period. Its not that all of this was done quid pro quo, but you can see how Bush administration officials were pretty simpatico with this general shift.

James: In a sense, this was an act of self-looting. We were at a point when the U.S. empire was declining. That was an unstated premise. So for people in charge, with oil, with war, I think they thought, why not make a bit of money off of this slipping position of America as the undisputed hegemon? So with Rumsfeld, when he said lets make things more efficient, he really meant lets charge our own government to hire pirates like Blackwater and give money to Halliburton.

Not to extoll the U.S. government before this, but we used to do this as a state. To paraphrase that Warren Beatty line from Network, there are no countries there is no America, theres just giant companies like Exxon and Total Oil and Gilead.

We think of Rumsfeld now as the king bureaucrat, but in fact, when he came in, it was very much like Rex Tillerson and the Trump administration. He was the CEO guy, he was the business guy who was gonna turn America into a corporation. I dont mean to belittle how corrupt the Trump administration can be, or say the Bush administration was so much worse, but theres a continuity between the two.

Earther: Looking back to that period shows how the Trump administration isnt just an aberration, but the continuation of this government relationship to corporations. So for the climate movement, for movements fighting corporations and their friends in government, what lessons should we take from that period to now, when we have former coal lobbyists heading the Environmental Protection Agency, former oil lobbyists in the Department of Interior?

James: On the show, we interviewed longtime anti-war activist Kathy Kelly, who was active in opposing not only the war in 2003 but also the sanctions in the 90s. She said that in 2003, that was the closest an anti-war movement had come in America to actually stopping war before it started. There was a pressure point where in Britain, which was an essential ally for the U.S. carrying out this war, then-Prime Minister Tony Blair was nervous about coming on board. As a Labour Party politician, he was still dependent on the legitimacy of the United Nations. and was begging the Bush administration to get the UN to pass a second resolution to put a rubber stamp on it.

People all over the world linked arms and took to the streets in Turkey, Britain, Paris, Italy, Morocco, the U.S. It looked like there was potentially going to be a delay in going to war.

There was a report that came out by Hans Blix [a UN weapons inspector] that said there were no weapons of mass destruction, but Tony Blair had just a couple weeks before bit the bullet and signed on without the resolution. It makes you wonder what would have happened if that report had come out just a little sooner when that mass movement was happening.

It shows that all too much is contingent upon the whims and mistakes of the ruling class, of inter-ruling class pressures. We definitely learned that marches are not enough. But that was still a rather inspiring moment to learn about how powerful international movements can be.

Earther: Theres been a recent push, especially from a lot of folks who did oppose the Iraq War like Rep. Barbara Lee and Sen. Bernie Sanders, and also from likely incoming officials like Jamal Bowman, to cut the military budget as part of the Green New Deal. Thats not just because the military contributes to severe environmental damage but also because the military is the worlds largest institutional consumer of fossil fuels and biggest institutional polluter.What effects do you all think cutting the Pentagon budget could have?

Kulwin: It would straightforwardly, substantially reduce or minimize a lot of ecological damage.But looking back to Iraq, we can also see that the more resources these people have the liberty to control, the more leverage they have to continue getting more resources. Budgets dont just mean resources, but they also decide who has power.

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What the Iraq War Can Teach the Climate Movement - Gizmodo

Blasts hit US army in Iraq, pro-Iran militias suspected | | AW – The Arab Weekly

BAGHDAD--At least two explosions have hit convoys supplying US-led coalition forces in Iraq in the last 24 hours, security sources said, the first on Monday evening near the southern border with Kuwait and the second on Tuesday north of Baghdad.

The explosions, which caused no casualties but did some material damage, are the latest in a string of such incidents in recent weeks. An attack in southern Iraq on Sunday hit a convoy carrying supplies to coalition forces, the military said.

Several thousand US forces are still based in Iraq, leading a coalition whose mission is to fight Islamic State extremists.

Those forces are also a target for Iran-backed Shia militias, which the United States blames for regular rocket attacks on bases hosting the coalition, and on other US targets such as Washingtons embassy in Baghdad.

The militias have vowed to avenge the death of paramilitary commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, who was killed alongside Iranian military Quds Force chief Qassem Soleimani in a US drone strike in Baghdad in January. Political forces aligned with the militias demand a full withdrawal of foreign troops from Iraq.

They also oppose Iraqs Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi, who took office in May. He is viewed as friendly with the United States and has challenged the power of Iran-aligned armed groups in Iraq.

Explosions and denials

Tuesdays explosion near the Taji military base north of Baghdad caused a fire to a container on one vehicle, the Iraqi military said in a statement. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blast.

The explosion on Monday night near the Jraischan border crossing between Iraq and Kuwait targeted a convoy carrying equipment for US forces, three sources from different branches of Iraqs security services and military said.

The Iraqi military denied that incident took place.

Kuwaits military on Twitter also denied any attack along its border with Iraq.

Vehicles are regularly loaded with military equipment at the crossing, the security sources said, and cargo is usually loaded or unloaded before entering or exiting Iraq.

Foreign companies are contracted by US forces to provide security in the area, the Iraqi security sources said.

Companions of the Cave

A little known Iraqi Shia militia group by the name of Ashab al-Kahf claimed responsibility for the attack and published a video showing an explosion at a distance. It said it was able to destroy US military equipment and large parts of the crossing.

The group issued a statement overnight claiming it destroyed equipment and vehicles belonging to the American enemy in a bombing targeting a border crossing south of the Iraqi city of Basra.

It later published an 11-second video clip it claimed showed the blast, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors militant groups.

The out-of-focus video shows what appeared to be an explosion and lights in the distance, with a man speaking in Arabic. The Associated Press could not immediately verify the video.

US Army Major John Rigsbee, a Central Command spokesman, said the American military was looking into reports of the explosion.

The Iraqi military issued a statement early Tuesday through the state-run Iraqi News Agency denying an attack took place

Ashab al-Kahf means Companions of the Cave in Arabic, referring to a Christian and Islamic story about youths escaping religious persecution hiding in a cave for hundreds of years.

The group has emerged alongside renewed threats by Shia militias amid rising tensions between the US and Iran. In January, an American drone strike killed a top Iranian general in Baghdad. Tehran responded with a ballistic missile attack that wounded dozens of American troops at a military base in Iraq.

The SITE Intelligence Group has referred to Ashab al-Kahf as reportedly an Iranian proxy unit. The group initially threatened US forces in April and claimed an attack on a convoy in July.

According to experts, the blasts could be part of an Iranian campaign by proxy ahead of the next round of US-Iraq strategic dialogue scheduled in Washington later this month.

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Blasts hit US army in Iraq, pro-Iran militias suspected | | AW - The Arab Weekly