US airstrikes against Iran-backed armed groups February 2 been expected for a while. Since the Hamas attacks in Israel on October 7, U.S. forces in the Middle East have change into the goal of more frequent attacks 150 times. These attacks, mainly on US bases in Iraq and Syria, caused minimal damage resulting from US air defense capabilities.
The Biden administration responded modest strikes in places where weapons are stored and militia training. But drone attack On January 28, three soldiers were killed and dozens of others were wounded at Tower 22, an American base on the Jordan-Syria border.
For many Washingtonians, the death was an unofficial red line political pressure quickly pushed President Biden to reply more forcefully against armed groups – and even against Iran itself.
Officials stated that the airstrikes targeted command and control sites, intelligence centers and drone storage facilities in Iraq and Syria linked to militias, in addition to the armed forces Quds Forcebranch of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Biden he also stated that the United States will proceed strikes at a time and place of its selecting.
Although the response was more widespread than previous strikes precisely calibrated to avoid fueling a wider war. Moreover, the United States signaled its intentions several days in advance, giving groups and their advisors time to take motion to reduce casualties.
The targets were militant groups
There are approx 40 militant groups in the Iran-backed region. These include famous groups equivalent to Hamaswhich carried out the October 7 attack in Israel, in addition to Hezbollah, which has been involved in cross-border shelling with Israel on the border with Lebanon since October. Meanwhile, Houthi rebels in Yemen faced separate Strikes in the USA and Great Britain in response to their attack on merchant ships in the Red Sea.
But many other, smaller groups are also lively. Claimed responsibility for deadly drone attack Islamic resistance movement in Iraqa loose network of Iran-backed militias, incl Kataib Hezbollah, which fought with coalition forces during the Iraq War. These and other militias proceed to focus on U.S. troops remaining in the region to stop a resurgence of the Islamic State.
Iran ensure a mixture of coaching, intelligence, financing and weapons for groups inside the self-proclaimed “axis of resistance”. But Tehran not fully in control militias that operate with various degrees of autonomy and might be higher viewed as troops moderately than proxies.
US political elections
The Biden administration is walking a tightrope in the Middle East. On the one hand, the administration’s primary goal for the last 4 months has been prevention a regional war in the wake of the Hamas attack and subsequent war in Gaza. At the same time, the United States sought to discourage adversaries who increasingly used military force against U.S. personnel (and, in the case of the Red Sea, against international merchant ships).
The challenge was to find out a response that will be strong enough to discourage further attacks, but not so devastating as to impress a full-fledged war.
As the election 12 months approaches, Biden faces additional scrutiny from home over his foreign policy decisions. Donald Trump has long been attempting to make Biden look weak towards Iran, which many Democrats did critical the president’s use of airstrikes, in addition to his approach to the war in Gaza. Calibrated weekend raids will likely attract much more criticism on each side – for going too far or not far enough.
Conflict in Gaza
There is not any guarantee that a ceasefire (temporary or everlasting) will put an end to attacks on US troops in Iraq and Syria or Houthi attacks on ships in the Red Sea. However, it can’t be denied that the crisis in Gaza has emboldened armed groups across the region repeatedly he used the war to justify himself their shares.
The United States, Egypt and Qatar acted as intermediaries between Israel and Hamas negotiate the contract this might mean a halt to military operations in Gaza in exchange for the gradual release of the hostages. Though clearly crucial to hostages and their families and for civilian population of Gazathe agreement may be key to easing, at the least temporarily, other tensions in the region.
Although the deal is much from final agreementthe nature of the US attacks was probably partly calibrated to avoid disrupting the process.
Preventing regional wars
Iran, in addition to Iraq and Syria, they condemned strikes and accused the US of aggression. But Iran didn’t give it plans revenge. This suggests that Tehran – like Washington – remains to be interested to avoid direct conflict with the USA.
Meanwhile, Kataib Hezbollah announced it I just want attacks on US soldiers, other armed groups have stated This this will not be the end and they’ll proceed to strike against the US presence in the region.
A goal for the Biden administration prevention regional war remains to be the right goal, even – or perhaps especially – in the face of rising tensions. A policy of cautious calibration coupled with meaningful negotiations to halt the war in Gaza might not be as politically tempting as flexing U.S. military power – but it surely is the approach most consistent with long-term U.S. and regional interests.