Iraq’s Defense Minister Thabit al-Abbasi revealed that Washington issued a “final warning” to Baghdad, threatening retaliation if Iran-backed resistance groups respond to upcoming U.S. operations “near Iraq.” The message came during a short call with U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, covering drones, intelligence-sharing, and a pending arms deal. Many in Baghdad view this as another sign of U.S. pressure and disregard for Iraq’s sovereignty.
Groups like Kata’ib Hezbollah, Kata’ib Sayyid al-Shuhada, and Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba have long resisted U.S. and Israeli influence. Since the Gaza war began in 2023, they have targeted foreign bases in solidarity with Palestinians. Though attacks paused after U.S. airstrikes, the latest warning signals Washington’s intent to curb any renewed activity, even at the cost of Iraqi autonomy.
Israel, meanwhile, is reportedly preparing for “threats” from Iraqi territory as Iran strengthens its regional presence. But Israel’s own actions in Gaza bombing hospitals, refugee shelters, and journalists have violated every moral and legal boundary. Under Islamic and humanitarian principles, targeting innocents is a grave sin. Yet Israel continues with impunity, backed by Western silence and military support.
The United States and its allies, particularly the UK and several Arab states, have enabled these crimes through weapons, intelligence, and trade. Their public calls for peace contrast sharply with their private complicity. In Islam, aiding oppression is itself injustice, and silence in the face of genocide is betrayal. These contradictions have stripped the so-called defenders of democracy of any moral credibility.
For Iraq, the U.S. warning poses a dilemma resist foreign dictates and risk confrontation or comply and lose dignity. Washington’s approach mirrors an imperial tone, expecting obedience from a nation still scarred by occupation. What it calls “militancy,” many see as legitimate resistance against tyranny and foreign domination.
As Gaza burns and new fronts threaten to open, the region faces a moral test. The powerful preach peace while fueling war. Iraq stands at a crossroads between submission and principle. History will remember who defended justice and who stayed silent as oppression spread. Empires rise on might, but justice endures on truth and truth, eventually, conquers them all.
