US Contemplates 'Calculated' Response to Drone Attack in Syria and Iraq

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin during a press conference at the Pentagon. (AFP)
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin during a press conference at the Pentagon. (AFP)
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US Contemplates 'Calculated' Response to Drone Attack in Syria and Iraq

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin during a press conference at the Pentagon. (AFP)
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin during a press conference at the Pentagon. (AFP)

As the administration of US President Joe Biden deliberates on how to address the recent drone attack on a US military base in Jordan without entangling in a prolonged conflict, political discourse in Washington revolves around the adopted policies concerning Iran.

Washington has accused pro-Iran factions of orchestrating the attacks, holding Iran accountable for supporting these factions.

This marks the first attack resulting in the death of American soldiers in the Middle East since the onset of the Israel-Hamas war in October.

US officials have confirmed to CBS News that plans have been approved for a series of strikes over a number of days against targets — including Iranian personnel and facilities — inside Iraq and Syria.

"We will have a multitiered response, and ... we have the ability to respond a number of times depending on what the situation is," Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said.

Kataib Hezbollah in Iraq - which claimed responsibility for the attack - announced Wednesday that it was suspending military operations against American forces.

Austin reacted to the group's statement during Thursday's news conference.

"We always listen to what people are saying, but we watch what they do, and ... actions are everything, so we'll see what happens in the future."

"This is a dangerous moment in the Middle East," Austin said. “We will continue to work to avoid a wider conflict in the region, but we will take all necessary actions to defend the United States.”

Austin said he didn't know whether Iran knew about the attack ahead of time, yet he called upon Tehran to quit supplying the Houthis in Yemen with weapons.

“We don't see an all-out conflict between Israel and Lebanese Hezbollah.”

Weather will be a major factor in the timing of the strikes, the US officials told CBS News, as the US prefers to have better visibility of selected targets as a safeguard against inadvertently hitting civilians who might stray into the area at the last moment.

Gen. Robert Abrams, a retired combatant commander, said the US Central Command, which oversees forces in the region, will be trying to provide several military strike options to the president.

"Biden needs to send a message, but he also doesn't want to escalate the tensions ... That's the hard conversation that is happening right now between the Pentagon, CENTCOM, and the White House," Abrams told ABC News Live.

The US has assessed that Iran manufactured the drone that slammed into a US base in Jordan over the weekend, killing three American soldiers and wounding more than 40, four US officials told Reuters.

The attack in Jordan, and any US response, is likely to stoke fears of wider conflict in the Middle East.

Teams of Biden and Trump

The military and policy decisions leading up to last weekend’s violence are many. Trump’s ordered assassination of Iranian Maj. Gen. Qasem Soleimani. Biden’s lifting of sanctions on Tehran. Trump’s withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear deal. Biden’s partial response to Iran-backed attacks on US troops, according to Politico newspaper.

Each of these actions emboldened Iran or staved off war — depending on whom you ask (the team of Biden or Trump).

Killing Soleimani didn’t stop attacks

Attacks didn’t stop after Soleimani was killed. Five days later, on Jan. 8, 15 missiles hit a US base in Iraq, injuring more than 100 Americans. US personnel and contractors were also killed in separate attacks in Iraq and Syria that spring and the conditions in Baghdad deteriorated so much that then-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo threatened to shut the US Embassy in Baghdad.

Top national security officials who served under Trump, as well as congressional Republicans, accused Biden of failing to prevent the attack and argued that the strike would not have happened if Trump had been president.

They argue that Biden has not struck back forcefully enough to the more than 160 attacks by Iran-backed proxies on US troops in Iraq, Syria and now Jordan, since October — showing a weakness that emboldened Tehran to continue encouraging the drone and missile strikes.

“The biggest problem is a failure of deterrence. Iran and its proxies believe they can attack the United States with impunity, which has been the case for three years,” Robert O’Brien, Trump’s last national security adviser, said in an interview. “Our weakness is provocative.”

Biden spokesperson Andrew Bates accused the former Trump officials and congressional Republicans of attempting to “politicize” Sunday's attack. He also said they should “stop giving Iran a pass for helping Russia attack Ukraine,” a reference to Iran's shipment of drones and other weapons to Moscow for strikes on Kyiv.

“Attempts by far-right congressional Republicans and former Trump officials to politicize our national security are illogical and detrimental to our safety and security,” Bates said in a Tuesday statement to Politico.

Behnam Ben Taleblu of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies revealed that, for now, the US intends to target locations and warehouses of Iranian-backed militias outside Iran.

The objective is to deprive Iran of a pretext for direct retaliation. Concerns loom over the potential escalation of conflict and its impact on oil prices, he added.

Taleblu, in an interview with Asharq Al-Awsat, asserted that calls for retaliation against Iran may be futile, considering the US may lack the will to sustain a prolonged military campaign.

Trump - also - chose to use force against Iranian-backed militias when there were American losses, he noted.



Rubio Vows to Place US Interests ‘Above All Else’ as Trump’s Top Diplomat

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., President-elect Donald Trump's choice to be Secretary of State, appears before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for his confirmation hearing, at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2025. (AP)
Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., President-elect Donald Trump's choice to be Secretary of State, appears before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for his confirmation hearing, at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2025. (AP)
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Rubio Vows to Place US Interests ‘Above All Else’ as Trump’s Top Diplomat

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., President-elect Donald Trump's choice to be Secretary of State, appears before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for his confirmation hearing, at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2025. (AP)
Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., President-elect Donald Trump's choice to be Secretary of State, appears before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for his confirmation hearing, at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2025. (AP)

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio promised on Wednesday to implement President-elect Donald Trump’s "America First" vision as secretary of state, vowing in his confirmation hearing that the incoming administration will forge a new path by placing American interests "above all else."

"Placing our core national interests above all else is not isolationism," Rubio told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. "It is the commonsense realization that a foreign policy centered on our national interest is not some outdated relic."

"The postwar global order is not just obsolete; it is now a weapon being used against us," Rubio said.

It's a remarkable opening salvo from Rubio, who was born in Miami to Cuban immigrants and who, if confirmed, would become the first Latino to serve as the nation’s top diplomat.

The confirmation hearing begins a new chapter in the political career of the 53-year-old Florida Republican, whose relationship with Trump has evolved over the last decade. Once rivals trading schoolyard insults as they campaigned for president in 2016, the two men became close allies as Trump campaigned for another White House term last year.

Rubio first came to Washington as part of the "tea party" wave in 2010 and once advocated for allowing a path to citizenship for immigrants in the country illegally. But like other Republicans, Rubio's views on immigration have shifted toward the hard-line stance of Trump, who has pledged to aggressively pursue deportations once he takes office on Monday.

Unlike many of Trump's Cabinet selections, Rubio is expected to easily win confirmation, notching support not only from Republicans but also Democrats who endorse him as a "responsible" pick to represent the US abroad. Many expect he will be among the first of Trump's Cabinet picks approved.

Democratic Sen. Brian Schatz, who served alongside Rubio on the Foreign Relations Committee, said he has high hopes that the Florida Republican will reject the isolationist approach of other Trump allies.

"I think Marco is a hawk, but he’s also an internationalist, and I think the challenge for him will be to maintain the long bipartisan tradition of America being indispensable in world affairs," the Hawaii lawmaker told The Associated Press. "And there are people in the Trump world who want us to run away from being the leaders of the free world. And I’m hoping that Marco’s instincts towards American strength will win the day."

Rubio's approach to foreign affairs is grounded in his years of service on the Foreign Relations committee and the Senate Intelligence panel. In his speeches and writings, he's delivered increasingly stern warnings about growing military and economic threats to the United States, particularly from China, which he says has benefited from a "global world order" that he characterizes as obsolete.

China, Rubio told the committee, has "lied, cheated, hacked, and stolen their way to global superpower status, at our expense."

The Chinese Foreign Ministry on Wednesday declined to comment on Rubio's remarks.

If confirmed, Rubio will become the leader of US foreign policy — though his role will surely remain secondary to Trump, who relishes the global stage and frequently uses the bully pulpit against America's allies.

Even before taking office, Trump has stirred angst in foreign capitals by threatening to seize the Panama Canal and Greenland and suggesting he will pressure Canada to become the nation’s 51st state.

By winning another term, Trump has won an "unmistakable mandate from the voters," Rubio will say.

"They want a strong America. Engaged in the world. But guided by a clear objective, to promote peace abroad, and security and prosperity here at home."

A Biden administration decision to rescind Cuba’s designation as a state sponsor of terrorism with just days left in office is likely to irk Rubio, who has long supported tough sanctions on the communist-run island.

Rubio’s office did not respond to multiple queries Tuesday about the senator’s reaction to the move, which many believe will almost certainly be reversed by the Trump administration.

Secretaries of state have played a key role in formulating the foreign policy of the country since its founding, starting with the first one, Thomas Jefferson, who served in the top Cabinet position under President George Washington.

Since then, Jefferson, as well as his 19th century successors James Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams, Martin Van Buren and James Buchanan, have all gone on to be elected president.

More recent secretaries of state have been less successful in their political ambitions, including John Kerry, who lost the 2004 presidential election to President George W. Bush before becoming the top diplomat, and Hillary Clinton, who lost the 2016 election to Trump.

The most successful secretaries of state have been known for their closeness to the presidents whom they serve, notably James Baker under George H.W. Bush, Condoleezza Rice under George W. Bush and, to some extent, Clinton under Barack Obama.

Like Clinton, Rubio was once a political rival to the president-elect who nominated them. However, the Clinton-Obama relationship during the 2008 Democratic primaries was not nearly as hostile as that between Trump and Rubio in the 2016 GOP primaries, which was marked by name-calling and personal insults.

Trump had an acrimonious relationship with his first secretary of state, Rex Tillerson. Trump fired him from the position via a social media post less than two years into his term.