Iran Joins ISIS Fight
Iran air strikes in Iraq raise a host of difficult questions.
In early December, Pentagon officials told Reuters on condition of anonymity that it found strong evidence that Iran had launched air strikes against the ISIS in Iraq. F-4 Phantom fighter jets were reportedly used to bomb positions of the extremist group in Diyala, a border province between the two countries and close to the Kurdish autonomous region. Initially, Tehran denied any involvement in attacks against ISIS in Iraqi territory, but a few days later Deputy Foreign Minister Ebrahim Rahimpour confirmed the action to The Guardian, although stressing that there has been no cooperation with the coalition led by the United States and that the airstrikes were requested by the Iraqi government.
On November 24, Al Jazeera broadcast a video of fighter jets flying over Iraqi territory conducting operations in support of Baghdad’s forces. Later, the HIS Jane’s Defense Weekly identified the jets as F-4 Phantom airplanes. Only Iran and Turkey have this model in the region. Given the proximity to the Iranian border and the Turkish reluctance to actively participate in the conflict, Jane’s analysts have concluded that the fighter jets belonged to the Iranian Air Force. It was the first visual evidence that Iranian armed forces have directly participated in the conflict.
A Iranian politician with defense links, Hamid Reza Taraghi confirmed to The New York Times that the event caught on camera was an Iranian operation conducted in coordination with the Iraqi Armed Forces. Taraghi also confirmed the existence of a buffer zone between the two countries that has allegedly been accepted by the Iraqi government. He claims that the U.S. was informed of the Iranian operation after the air sortie had already been concluded. However, U.S. command and control AWACS systems would certainly have screened the action while it was undergoing. Besides, the U.S. military would probably have monitored the attack from its military bases in Kuwait, Qatar, and Iraq.
Iran was the first country to pledge assistance to Iraq to combat ISIS. It has sent military equipment and provided field assistance. The Iranian interest in the fight against ISIS grew after the terrorist group invaded Iraq in June. The month, Iran sent Sukhoi Su-25 fighter jets to help with Iraq’s defense. Moreover, the Shiite militias fighting ISIS in Iraq trained by Iran are an important support to the fragmented Iraqi Army. The commander of the Iranian elite brigade, the Al-Quds, was photographed in Iraq a few months ago.
Meanwhile, the U.S. has led since August an international coalition that includes France, Australia, the United Kingdom, and Middle Eastern countries such as Jordan and Saudi Arabia to fight ISIS in both Syria and Iraq. The coalition’s initial focus was on halting an impending ethnic slaughter of the Kurdish population in Iraq through a bombing campaign and the provision of weapons and humanitarian aid. Shortly afterwards, the reach of the air strikes started to include targets in Syrian territory. It subsequently it was intensified in mid-November.
Since the West began deeming ISIS a threat, the idea has been floated of the potential for cooperation between Iran and the U.S. in the fight against a common enemy. In the case of air operations, the Iraqi Armed Forces have served as a middleman between Washington and Tehran. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has denied cooperating with Iran, but he has affirmed that Iraq is free to do whatever it wants in its air space. This suggests the existence of de facto cooperation between the two rivals, even if minimal and centralized in Baghdad. Kerry hints that, if there is such indirect cooperation, the U.S. is not interested in boycotting it based on Iraq’s sovereignty over its territory. “It’s self-evident that if Iran is taking on ISIS in some particular place, and it’s confined to taking on ISIS and has an impact, it’s going to be – the net effect is positive … But that’s not something we’re coordinating with Iran.”
It is important to remember that U.S. President Barack Obama has sent a letter to Ayatollah Khamenei to assure him that air strikes in Iraq are not a challenge to Tehran’s influence, pointing to the shared interest in combating ISIS. It seems clear that the international coalition’s decision to focus its air strikes on Kobane and Raqqa took into account the Iranian Air Force’s actions in Iraq. Since the beginning, the U.S. appears to have seen Tehran as responsible for the fight against the extremists on the eastern front, close to the Iran-Iraq border.
This de facto cooperation takes place at a time of growing rapprochement between the U.S. and Iran. Since Hasan Rouhani was sworn in as Iran’s president in 2013, there has been a stronger drive by the two countries to resolve their differences through negotiations. Rouhani stressed in a speech made at the United Nations that he was open to dialogue with the West. Obama took the opportunity to seek an agreement on the Iranian nuclear program, in spite of strong opposition from Israel and Saudi Arabia, both longstanding U.S. allies. An interim agreement between Iran and the P5+1 (U.S., U.K., France, Russia, China, and Germany) was quickly reached, under which Iran would halt its enrichment of uranium in exchange for the lifting of some sanctions. This accord has been extended to facilitate further talks on a permanent deal. The latest round of negotiations has been extended to June 2015.
This rapprochement worries both Israel and Saudi Arabia, because it could auger a geopolitical reconfiguration of the Middle East. Both countries will be watching the outcomes of the nuclear talks next year. Although a deal is looking less likely, considering that U.S. Congress will be under the control of the Republican Party, which opposes negotiating with Iran , an agreement would significantly alter the regional landscape. The political polarization in the U.S. on the issue could perhaps be attenuated with Israeli (and perhaps Saudi) consent to a permanent agreement. The reactions of Riyadh and Tel-Aviv to clearer Iranian involvement in the fight against ISIS could hint at their stance.
In the meantime, some kind of coordination between coalition and Iranian forces in Iraq will be necessary, to avoid incidents. While the risk might be low, it is not absent. In a recent article, the New York Times noted that a single Iraqi officer will act as intermediary.
Another question is what happens once ISIS is defeated? How will the coalition and regional powers react, especially regarding the Syrian civil war? Iran has supported Assad since 2011, while the U.S., France, and Saudi Arabia (among others) have demanded his ouster. These differences have been put aside in the fight against ISIS, but they may well resume once the ISIS threat has been overcome.
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Bruno Gomes Guimarães is a researcher at the South American Institute for Policy and Strategy (ISAPE).
Marcelo Scalabrin Müller is an assistant researcher at ISAPE.