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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
World
Amy Teibel

Iran-backed Iraq militia withdraws after attack on U.S. Embassy

An Iran-backed Iraqi militia broke up its encampment outside the U.S. embassy in Baghdad, a move that could ease tensions between Tehran and Washington that escalated after fighters attacked the compound.

The Popular Mobilization Units had called on the fighters and their supporters to leave the area Wednesday, "out of respect for the decision of the Iraqi government that ordered this and to preserve the stature of the state." The last protesters were gone by late afternoon and moved their tent camp across the Tigris River to an area facing the embassy, militia members reported.

The PMU is the umbrella group to which the Kataieb Hezbollah paramilitary unit belongs. The assault on the embassy Tuesday was precipitated by deadly U.S. airstrikes against Kataieb Hezbollah bases in Iraq and Syria earlier in the week, and carried out by group fighters and their supporters.

"The message of the protesters has been delivered," Foreign Affairs Minister Mohamad Alhakim said on Twitter.

The rare direct U.S. assault on the Iran-backed militia and the attack on the embassy threatened to spiral into a broader confrontation. The U.S. and Iran are already facing off over the Trump administration's crippling economic campaign against Tehran and suspected Iranian reprisals, and additional American forces were ordered to the region after the embassy attack.

In the meantime, a war of words ensued. U.S. President Donald Trump blamed the attack on Iran, which denied involvement, and Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, warned that his country was ready to strike back "unhesitatingly" against any retaliation from Washington. The semi-official Tasnim news agency reported that Tehran summoned the Swiss charge d'affaires, who represents U.S. interests in Iran, to relay its objections to the American airstrikes.

The U.S. raids were ordered in retaliation for a rocket assault in Iraq that killed an American contractor involved in the U.S.-led fight against Islamic State.

Iraq has been roiled in recent months by anti-government protests fueled, in part, by Tehran's powerful influence over the country. U.S. officials had boasted that anti-Iran protests in Iraq signaled a grassroots rebellion against Tehran's influence, but the attack on the embassy turned Washington into the focus of anger instead.

On Tuesday, Iraq's outgoing prime minister, Adel Abdul Mahdi, reiterated his denunciation of the U.S. raids but called on protesters to leave the compound, threatening severe penalties for attacks on the mission.

Earlier Wednesday, U.S. troops fired tear gas to disperse pro-Iran fighters and their supporters gathered outside the embassy.

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