Baghdad has cautioned Israel against flying over Iraqi
airspace en route to an attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities. Monday’s
statements marked the first time the Iraqi government has publicly declared it
would not allow such an action.
“We have… warned Israel that if they violate Iraqi airspace,
they will have to bear the consequences,” Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Hussein
al-Shahristani told AFP. He added that Iraq would not disclose what the
reaction might be to such an overflight, so that Israel will not able to “take
that into account.”
Shahristani also said that Iraq has received assurances from
the US that America “will never violate Iraqi airspace or Iraqi sovereignty by
using our airspace to attack any of our neighbors.”
Iraq lies across the most direct flight path from Israel to
Iran, so an attack against the Islamic Republic’s nuclear facilities could
necessitate violating Iraq’s airspace. The US, however, can launch an attack
from its naval vessels stationed in the Persian Gulf and therefore avoid
entanglement with a third country, as highlighted in a position paper published
last week by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
The Iranian government says its nuclear program is for
civilian use, but Iran is widely believed by the West and the Arab world to be
racing to develop nuclear weapons technology, which would dramatically change
the balance of power in the Middle East.
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