Arab leaders have voiced fears before the UN of new conflict in the region as tensions soar between Iran and the US.
The annual extravaganza of international diplomacy at the UN General Assembly has been turned into a virtual affair this year, with leaders sending in recorded speeches due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Two days after US President Donald Trump ramped up pressure on Iran in a widely contested move, the leaders of Iraq and Saudi Arabia on Wednesday (Thursday AEST) voiced concerns about the region.
“We do not want Iraq to become a sort of playground for other forces that will kill each other on our territory,” Iraqi President Barham Salih said in his address. “We have witnessed enough wars and enough attacks on our sovereignty.”
Iraq has attempted a delicate balancing act between neighbouring Iran, which shares the Shia faith of the majority in its Arab neighbour, and the US, which invaded and toppled dictator Saddam Hussein in 2003.
President Donald Trump in January ordered a drone strike in Baghdad that killed Iran’s most prominent general, Qassem Soleimani, as well as an Iraqi Shia paramilitary leader, raising calls in Baghdad for the expulsion of US forces. Mr Trump rejected the calls for a withdrawal but this month ordered a sharp cutback of troops in Iraq as part of his election promise to stop “endless” wars.
Read the article by Philippe Rater and Shaun Tandon in The Australian.