Iraq Ex-PM Reveals Details of Phone Call with Trump before Soleimani’s Assassination

Former Prime Minister of Iraq Adil Abdul-Mahdi, Asharq Al-Awsat
Former Prime Minister of Iraq Adil Abdul-Mahdi, Asharq Al-Awsat
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Iraq Ex-PM Reveals Details of Phone Call with Trump before Soleimani’s Assassination

Former Prime Minister of Iraq Adil Abdul-Mahdi, Asharq Al-Awsat
Former Prime Minister of Iraq Adil Abdul-Mahdi, Asharq Al-Awsat

Iraq’s former Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi has revealed the details of a phone call conversation he had with US President Donald Trump on New Year’s Eve (2020) regarding the attack on the US embassy in Baghdad during the last two days of 2019.

“Trump called me last New Year's Eve at around nine o'clock Baghdad time, and thanked us for ending the storming of the American embassy and asked me whether the attackers were Iraqis or Iranians, so I told him they were Iraqis who objected to the US air strikes on armed factions on the border with Syria,” Abdul-Mahdi said in a documentary feature on the assassination of the commander of Iran’s Quds Force, General Qasem Soleimani and Popular Mobilization Forces Deputy Chief Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis.

On January 3, 2020, a US drone strike targeted a convoy transporting Soleimani and al-Muhandis at the Baghdad International Airport.

“Americans do not know the Iranians well, but the Iraqis are the ones who know them well,” Abdul-Mahdi added, quoting Trump.

The ex-prime minister added that he told the US leader that neither the Iranians nor the US want a war, and proposed either holding direct negotiations with Iran or establishing tacit agreements, with the latter being a popular approach since 2003.

Subsequently, Trump admitted to Abdul-Mahdi that Iraq is a good negotiator and that the US is prepared for anything Baghdad can achieve in this regard.

“There was approval and an official invitation for Soleimani to come to Iraq for discussions,” Abdul-Mahdi said.

Noting that Soleimani’s assassination could not have been decided and planned within a day or two, Abdul-Mahdi was skeptic towards whether Trump held sincere intentions for negotiating with Iran, or that it was all a play acted out less than 48 hours before launching the strike on the airport.



Israeli Army Targets Fatah Commander in South Lebanon

A car burning after the Israeli raid in the city of Sidon (EPA)
A car burning after the Israeli raid in the city of Sidon (EPA)
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Israeli Army Targets Fatah Commander in South Lebanon

A car burning after the Israeli raid in the city of Sidon (EPA)
A car burning after the Israeli raid in the city of Sidon (EPA)

The Israeli army said it targeted in an airstrike in Lebanon on Wednesday Khalil al-Maqdah, a commander in the armed wing of the Palestinian Fatah movement, describing him as having worked for the Iranian Revolutionary Guards.

"Earlier today... an air force aircraft targeted Khalil al-Maqdah in the Sidon area of southern Lebanon," the army said in a statement, which also claimed that Maqdah and his brother worked for Iran in "directing attacks and transferring funds and weapons to terrorist infrastructure" in the occupied West Bank, AFP reported.

In response, the sFatah party accused Israel of seeking to “ignite a regional war.”

Al-Maqdah was killed in a strike on his car in the southern Lebanese city of Sidon, according to Fatah and a Lebanese security source.

The Israeli military said al-Maqdah was the brother of Mounir al-Maqdah, who heads the Lebanese branch of Fatah’s armed wing, the Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, and accused them both of “directing terror attacks and smuggling weapons” to the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

The attack marks the first such reported attack on a senior member of Fatah, the movement led by Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas, in more than 10 months of cross-border clashes between Israel and Lebanon’s Hezbollah movement following the Gaza war.

Fatah said al-Maqdah had been killed “in a cowardly assassination carried out by ... Zionist (Israeli) warplanes on Sidon,” describing him as “one of the leaders” of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades in Lebanon, the movement’s armed wing.

In a statement, it said al-Maqdah had “a central role” in “supporting the Palestinian people and its resistance” during the Gaza war and an “important role in supporting resistance cells” for years in the West Bank.

A senior Fatah official in the West Bank city of Ramallah accused Israel of killing him in order to spark a regional war.

The “assassination of a Fatah official is further proof that Israel wants to ignite a full-scale war in the region,” Tawfiq Tirawy, a member of Fatah’s central committee, told AFP in Ramallah.

A Lebanese security source and Lebanon’s official National News Agency reported the same information.

An AFP correspondent at the site of the attack said a car was struck near the Palestinian refugee camps of Ain al-Helweh and Mieh Mieh, adding that rescuers had pulled a body from the charred vehicle.

Dozens of angry Fatah supporters gathered inside the Ain al-Helweh camp, the AFP correspondent said, adding gunshots were fired in the air.