Iranian advisers who helped Iraq defeat Islamic State to “go home”, after meeting with the leaders
U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said on Sunday it was time for
Iranian-backed militias and their Iranian advisers who helped Iraq
defeat Islamic State to “go home”, after a rare joint meeting with the
leaders of Iraq and Saudi Arabia.
The campaign to uproot the militants left whole cities in ruins and has hit Iraq’s economy.
The rare senior meeting, signaling a thaw between states
that have been at loggerheads for decades, was also attended by Saudi
King Salman and Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi.
WINNING THE PEACE
A second meeting will be held in Baghdad but no date was mentioned.
The United States is concerned that Iran, a Shi‘ite
regional power, will take advantage of gains against IS in Iraq and
Syria to expand the influence it gained after the U.S. invasion in 2003,
something Sunni Arab rivals such as Riyadh also oppose.
“Iranian
militias that are in Iraq, now that the fight against Daesh and ISIS is
coming to a close, those militias need to go home. The foreign fighters
in Iraq need to go home and allow the Iraqi people to regain control,”
Tillerson said at a joint news conference with Saudi Foreign Minister
Adel Jubeir.
Tens of thousands of Iraqis heeded
a call to arms in 2014 after IS seized a third of the country’s
territory, forming the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), which receive
funding and training from Tehran and have been declared part of the
Iraqi security apparatus.
A senior U.S.
official said Tillerson had been referring to the PMF and the Quds
Force, the foreign paramilitary and espionage arm of the powerful
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
Iranian
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif berated Tillerson’s remarks as
influenced by Iran’s oil-rich regional rival Saudi Arabia.
“Exactly
what country is it that Iraqis who rose up to defend their homes
against ISIS return to?,” Zarif said in a tweet. “Shameful US FP
(foreign policy), dictated by petrodollars.”
Iraq’s
military, armed by the United States but supported by the PMF, ejected
the ultra-hardline Sunni Muslim militant group from Mosul and other
cities in northern Iraq this year. Several thousand U.S. troops are
still in the country, mostly for training but also to carry out raids
against IS.
A
new joint ministerial-level body between Iraq and Saudi Arabia convened
its inaugural meeting earlier on Sunday to coordinate their fight
against IS and on rebuilding Iraqi territory wrested from the group.
Jubeir
emphasized historic ties between the two neighbors, which share a
border, vast oil resources and many of the same tribes.
“The
natural tendency of the two countries and people is to be very close to
each other as they have been for centuries. It was interrupted for a
number of decades. We’re trying now to make up for lost ground,” he
said.
WINNING THE PEACE
Tillerson said the council would contribute to reforms to build Iraq’s private sector and encourage foreign investment.
“This will be critical to winning the peace that has been earned through the hard-fought military gains,” he said.
State
media said the council had expressed satisfaction with global oil
markets’ recovery as a result of a deal with other countries to boost
prices by limiting production.
The council also
agreed to reopen a Saudi Basic Industries Corp office in Iraq and grant
Saudi agriculture company SALIC an investment license.
Saudi Commerce and Investment Minister Majid
al-Qusaibi told Reuters his country seeks to boost exports and is eyeing
investment opportunities in Iraq’s agricultural and petrochemical
sectors, among others.
He said backing from the highest levels of both governments would produce “quick results on the ground”.
“Let’s
not cry over spilt milk. Whatever happened in the past has happened.
The good news is we are all here toward building a prosperous and
beneficial future for both countries,” he said in a telephone interview.
Tillerson and Jubeir also discussed
Washington’s hawkish new policy towards Iran, including a possible
withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear deal and new sanctions on the IRGC.
“Both
our countries believe those who conduct business with the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard, any of their entities, European companies or other
companies around the world really do so at great risk,” Tillerson said.