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Iraqi President: US Has No Right to Use Iraq as ‘Staging Post’ for Attack on Iran

Iraqi President Barham Salih tells Christiane Amanpour he is truly concerned with the escalating hostilities between the United States and Iran.
Iraqi President Barham Salih tells CNN's Christiane Amanpour he is truly concerned with the escalating hostilities between the United States and Iran. (Photo: CNN screenshot)

“There is no military solution to this problem.”

(By Andrea Germanos, Common Dreams) Iraqi President Barham Salih said Tuesday that the United States has no right to use his country as a launchpad for a strike against Iran.

Salih, in his interview with CNN‘s Christiane Amanpour, also talked about the adverse impacts his own country has felt as a result of U.S. imposed sanctions, stressed the need to prevent another war, and warned that tearing up the nuclear deal entirely “could be disastrous for the entire neighborhood as a whole.”

“It’s easy to start a war but very, very difficult to end a war.”
—Iraqi President Barham Salih

Their conversation, as Amanpour noted, came amid rising tensions between the U.S. and Iran, including new economic sanctions, the deployment of 1,000 more troops to the Middle East, and President Donald Trump’s threat Tuesday to “obliterate” areas of the country..

Salih said he welcomed Trump’s last minute decision last week to call off an initially-approved strike against Iran because, the Iraqi leader noted, “there is no military solution to this problem.”

Instead, he said, “the parties involved need to sit down together and focus on what is important—really combating violent extremism, focusing on regional integration and economic issues.”

“This part of the world needs fundamental solutions not another war,” said Salih, adding that “it’s best to de-escalate.”

“The way to solve the problem is dialogue,” he said, “sitting down [at] a table and really begin hammering out on the fundamental issues that are affecting that part of the world.”

The harms from the new sanctions the U.S. imposed against Tuesday—which Iranian President Hassan Rouhani called “outrageous and idiotic”—are impacts Salih said his country is well acquainted with.

“We in Iraq have suffered from sanctions in the 1990s, and the devastation that has afflicted Iraqi society has been really enduring, even to date,” said Salih. “So we feel for the people of Iran.”

After Amanpour replayed part of an interview earlier this year in which Trump said he wanted to maintain a U.S. military presence in Iraq to “watch Iran,” Salih reaffirmed his stance that doing so is not part of the deal brokered between the U.S. and Iraq.

“The American troops, the coalition troops in Iraq are there… at the invitation of the Iraqi government for the specific, exclusive mission of fighting ISIS,” said Salih.

“We do not want our territory to be a staging post for any hostile action against any of our neighbors, including Iran,” he added. “And this is definitely not part of the agreement between the Iraqi government and the United States.”

Asked by Amanpour if he sees parallels between the lead-up to the Iraq war under the George W. Bush administration and the situation now between the U.S. and Iran, Salih suggested it was a different situation—but there’s a clear lesson to be learned.

“I think [Saddam Hussein] was a unique case in history but the parallel is as follows,” said Salih. “It’s easy to start a war but very, very difficult to end a war.”

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