Demagogy from regime-affiliated USA propaganda sources.
Reality is this:
View attachment 960391
https://www.chathamhouse.org/sites/...ion_docs/INTA91_1_01_Esfandiary_Tabatabai.pdf
"I"SIS was a strategy tool of NATO and zionist policy to destabilize the Axis of Resistance, uproot and tear the social fabric in West Asia and facilitate revision of regional borders inherited from the Sykes-Picot agreement, the ultimate goal being generalized "ethno"-sectarian balkanization of nation-states as per the Bernard Lewis, Oded Yinon and Ralph Peters plans and in accordance with "constructive chaos" theories prevalent in Washington establishment circles.
"I"SIS had fulfilled its mission in part when the Resistance reorganized to launch a counter-offensive in the summer of 2014. That's when a panicked USA jumped in to prevent the Resistance from regaining all "I"SIS-occupied territories, else it would have lost its foothold in Iraq and Syria.
That image shows that US and Iran are supporting same elements in the region. Do you realize this?
Assad regime provided space and route to Al-Qaeda affiliates to wreck havoc in Iraq:
During the early stages of the U.S. occupation of Iraq, the Syrian regime enabled the transit of radical Sunni Islamist fighters to the country, where they targeted Americans and mostly Iranian-backed Shiites.
Wrongly defining the struggles gripping the Middle East encourages misguided remedies.
www.newyorker.com
These Al-Qaeda affiliates came together to establish the notorious Al-Qaeda Network in Iraq (AQI), and this group sparked Shia - Sunni strife in Iraq with its misdeeds:
Iraq’s al-Qaida leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi has declared “all-out war” on Shia Muslims in Iraq in response to a US-Iraqi offensive on the town of Tal Afar, according to an audio clip posted on the internet.
www.aljazeera.com
On November 2, Ir
www.washingtoninstitute.org
en.wikipedia.org
US-led forces fought and defeated AQI among other insurgent groups and managed to stabilize Iraq in 2011, but this was a costly undertaking that claimed many lives in the process. Obama administration withdrew American forces from Iraq in 2011 with the assumption that Iraq is largely stabilized and capable of managing its affairs at this stage:
President says 'America's war in Iraq will be over' with decision to pull all troops from Iraq by the end of the year
www.theguardian.com
The convoy’s departure came three days after the American military folded its flag in a ceremony to celebrate the end of its mission and marked the end of the nearly nine-year war.
www.nytimes.com
But Syrian "terrorism export services" to Iraq continued with Al-Qaeda affiliates in Syria colluding with disgruntled elements in Iraq (Saddam loyalists) to launch ISIL movement in 2013:
Website linked to Jabhat al-Nusra confirms move that is likely to alarm international backers of anti-Assad fighters.
www.aljazeera.com
From military victories to surveillance, former Baathists are a powerful factor in the rise and control of Islamic state.
www.reuters.com
As the radical jihadist group marches through Iraq, it is quietly utilizing a network of former members of Sadaam Hussein's army to help militarize its fighting force.
www.pbs.org
Jihadi fighters celebrate advance with slick propaganda, but its enemies are responding on both sides of frontier
www.theguardian.com
Iran and ISIS, the two major players in both countries, view the entire region as one battlefield.
www.businessinsider.com
Tallha Abdulrazaq, Gareth Stansfield, The Enemy Within: ISIS and the Conquest of Mosul, Middle East Journal, Vol. 70, No. 4 (AUTUMN 2016), pp. 525-542
www.jstor.org
Syria and Iraq had deliberated on the possibility of merger in earlier times and ISIL movement was a bad immitation of this sentiment.
Former Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Ibadi - one of the leading figureheads in fight against ISIL in the Middle East - also pointed out that Syria was exporting terrorism to Iraq:
Our aim is to stop or to control regional conflicts. There is a conflict in the region, there is a huge conflict. You have Saudi Arabia on one side, probably eager to be a leader of the Islamic Sunni world. You have Iran on the other side who is eager to become [the leader of] the Shia Islamic world, or even beyond. You have Turkey, as well, competing for the leadership of the Muslim Sunni world. And here we are having conflict in Yemen, having conflict in Syria, and it’s been extended before to Iraq. In Iraq, we don’t want to be part of this conflict. We are looking after our own interest, and we think we are the victims of this conflict. What happened in Syria impacted us directly.
Look what happened with Daesh when they crossed the borders into Iraq. So, I think we are very eager to stop these regional conflicts. It’s tough. It happens to be we are here, Iraq is here. We cannot move it from the map. We are bordering Turkey, bordering Iran, bordering Saudi Arabia, bordering Jordan, Kuwait, Syria, of course. And we are here, we have to live with our neighbors…
When Syrian Civil War broke out in 2011, terrorists running amok in Syria colluded with Saddam loyalists in Iraq to seize Iraqi and Syrian lands for themselves:
Haider al-Abadi told Americans that the only way to save Iraq is by putting an end to Syrian "terrorism export services."
Obama administration got the message and dispatched American forces to Iraq to support Iraqi government in its mission to defeat ISIL in the country (
Operation Inherent Resolve), and this operation was also expanded to Syria with support of Kurd:
These realities are also touched upon in following article:
The scale of the violence, death, and destruction has triggered alarm about a wider regional conflict.
www.newyorker.com
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Iran worked with Iraqi Popular Mobilization Forces to fight ISIL in Iraq.
Iran also worked with its allies in Syria to fight ISIL but as a secondary objective. The (Assad regime + Iran + Hezbollah + Russia) collective was working to defeat Syrian rebels in Syria who were opposing Assad regime.
Iran’s spies cheered U.S. bombings in the war against ISIS while covertly arming the Kurdish Peshmerga and penetrating the Islamic State’s leadership.
theintercept.com
Iran could respond to ISIL movement
earlier because US had left Iraq in 2011.
US could not come back and fight ISIL immediately.
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I understand that US and Iran have tensions but you are blaming the wrong side for creating ISIL.
If anything, Iran has benefited the most from American military operations in the Middle East:
1. Operation Iraqi Freedom to eliminate Saddam regime (2003 - 2011)
2. Operation Inherent Resolve to eliminate ISIL (2014 - 2021)
US have defeated two of the greatest threats to Iran in the region.
It is not difficult to see why Saudi and Turkey are upset.
What are you complaining about? Strange spin you give to these matters, dear.