Thousands of additional US troops heading to Middle East after Soleimani strikes

The US is sending nearly 3,000 additional troops to the Middle East as a precaution amid rising threats to American forces in the region, US officials said. (File/AFP)
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Updated 04 January 2020
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Thousands of additional US troops heading to Middle East after Soleimani strikes

  • The officials said the troops would be joining the roughly 750 forces that were sent to Kuwait earlier this week
  • Trump said he ordered the killing of Qassem Soleimani to stop a war, not start one

WASHINGTON: The United States is sending nearly 3,000 additional troops to the Middle East from the 82nd Airborne Division as a precaution amid rising threats to American forces in the region, US officials said on Friday.
Iran promised vengeance after a US air strike in Baghdad on Friday killed Qassem Soleimani, Tehran’s most prominent military commander and the architect of its growing influence in the Middle East.
The overnight attack, authorized by President Donald Trump, was a dramatic escalation in a “shadow war” in the Middle East between Iran and the United States and its allies.
The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the troops would be joining the roughly 750 forces that were sent to Kuwait earlier this week.

President Donald Trump said on Friday he ordered the killing of Qassem Soleimani to stop a war, not start one, saying the Iranian military commander was planning imminent attacks on Americans.
"Soleimani was plotting imminent and sinister attacks on American diplomats and military personnel but we caught him in the act and terminated him," Trump told reporters at his Mar-a-Lago resort.
"We took action last night to stop a war. We did not take action to start a war," Trump said, adding that the United States does not seek regime change in Iran.

Earlier, a senior US official on Iran said that Soleimani was planning an imminent attack on US facilities and workers in Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and other countries.

Brian Hook, the US Special representative for Iran, told Al Arabiya TV that the attack was going to kill hundreds of Americans.

US officials told Reuters earlier this week that thousands of additional troops could be sent to the region and had been told to prepare to deploy.
Since May, the United States has already dispatched about 14,000 additional troops to the Middle East.


Iranian FM slams WEF’s ‘double standards’ after revoking his invite, but keeping Israeli president’s

Updated 34 min 28 sec ago
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Iranian FM slams WEF’s ‘double standards’ after revoking his invite, but keeping Israeli president’s

  • Araghchi rejected the decision, claiming his appearance was cancelled “on the basis of lies and political pressure”

DUBAI: Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has criticized the World Economic Forum for rescinding his invitation to the annual meeting in Davos amid international scrutiny of his country’s crackdown on recent nationwide protests, accusing the forum of applying “blatant double standards” and succumbing to Western pressure. 

The WEF confirmed that Araghchi will not attend this year’s summit, running until Jan. 23, saying that “although he was invited last fall, the tragic loss of lives of civilians in Iran over the past few weeks means that it is not right for the Iranian government to be represented at Davos this year.”

In a post on X, Araghchi rejected the decision, claiming his appearance was cancelled “on the basis of lies and political pressure from Israel and its US‑based proxies and apologists.”

The Iranian minister criticized what he called the WEF’s “blatant double standards” for keeping an invitation open to Israel’s President Isaac Herzog despite international accusations of genocide of the Palestinians in Gaza.

He also referenced Herzog’s participation in Davos in January 2024 despite legal complaints filed against him in Switzerland over his country’s conduct during its war in Gaza, which killed around 71,000 people. 

“If WEF wants to feign a supposedly ‘moral’ stance, that is its prerogative. But it should at least be consistent about it,” Araghchi wrote, arguing that the decision exposed a “moral depravity and intellectual bankruptcy.”

Israel’s Herzog is scheduled to participate in a moderated discussion at WEF on Thursday.