Audio By Carbonatix
The assassination of Qasem Soleimani has plunged Iran and the United States into their most serious confrontation since the hostage crisis in 1979.
President Donald Trump's decision to kill Soleimani removes one of the most obdurate and effective enemies of the US, and delivers a blow to the heart of the Islamic republic of Iran. It is also a dangerous escalation in a region that was already tense and full of violence.
The killing at Baghdad airport has increased tensions sharply, creating fears of a slide into an all-out war. That is no certainty. Neither the Americans nor the Iranians want one. But the crisis brought on by the killing of Soleimani - and a senior Iraqi ally - amplifies the chances of a bloody miscalculation.
Iran has sworn vengeance. That threat has to be taken seriously. Soleimani was at the core of the regime, and a talisman for Iran's hardliners. They will want to get even, perhaps more than that.
Media caption: Thousands took to the streets of Kerman to mourn Gen Soleimani, a popular figure in Iran
An act of war to answer that of the US - for example attacking US ships in the Gulf - would risk provoking a devastating response. Iran's oil refineries are on the coast and would be easy targets for the vast firepower the US has in and around the Gulf.
When Iran retaliates, it is likely to follow Soleimani's own indirect tactics: so-called asymmetric warfare, spurning an attack through the front door for one through a side window.
Soleimani cultivated a range of well-armed militias, which give Iran options short of a head-to-head confrontation with the Americans which it would only lose.
The Americans will now be looking at their most vulnerable deployments in the Middle East. One is the small force in Syria.
Media caption: Trump - We took action to stop, not start a war
But it is not at all clear whether the assassination fits into a coherent US strategy, and such an assumption could be dangerous and wrong.
Soleimani was a colossal figure inside Iran. He was its strategic mastermind. Perhaps he left a plan of steps to take if he were killed.
This assassination at the start of a new year and a new decade might turn into another Middle Eastern milestone, touching off another sequence of bloody events.
To begin with, the Iranian regime must now be planning its answer to his death, to show that the position Soleimani spent so long creating outside its borders in the Middle East can be defended.
Proxy forces
Despite arms embargoes, Iran has developed a modern arsenal of rockets and missiles. But if it wanted to use them against US forces as part of a reprisal, Iran would risk making matters worse.
Media caption: Thousands took to the streets of Kerman to mourn Gen Soleimani, a popular figure in Iran
An act of war to answer that of the US - for example attacking US ships in the Gulf - would risk provoking a devastating response. Iran's oil refineries are on the coast and would be easy targets for the vast firepower the US has in and around the Gulf.
When Iran retaliates, it is likely to follow Soleimani's own indirect tactics: so-called asymmetric warfare, spurning an attack through the front door for one through a side window.
Soleimani cultivated a range of well-armed militias, which give Iran options short of a head-to-head confrontation with the Americans which it would only lose.
The Americans will now be looking at their most vulnerable deployments in the Middle East. One is the small force in Syria.
Calculated risk
A big question is why the Americans chose now to kill Soleimani. He had been a thorn in their sides since at least the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. He made sure Iraqi Shias raised, trained and equipped militias which became effective and ruthless fighters against the US and its allies. The Americans and their allies in Israel and the West have tracked Soleimani closely for years. It's likely that he has been in their sights before. The fact that this time the Americans pulled the trigger suggests that President Trump believes the reward is worth the risk, that the Iranian regime has been so weakened by isolation, economic sanctions and recent demonstrations that it will rage but not offer a serious strategic threat.
Media caption: Trump - We took action to stop, not start a war
But it is not at all clear whether the assassination fits into a coherent US strategy, and such an assumption could be dangerous and wrong.
Soleimani was a colossal figure inside Iran. He was its strategic mastermind. Perhaps he left a plan of steps to take if he were killed.
This assassination at the start of a new year and a new decade might turn into another Middle Eastern milestone, touching off another sequence of bloody events.
To begin with, the Iranian regime must now be planning its answer to his death, to show that the position Soleimani spent so long creating outside its borders in the Middle East can be defended.DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
GH¢30bn Big Push Programme to strengthen Ghana’s infrastructure in 2026 – EM Advisory
37 seconds -
Services sector to drive Ghana’s baseline 4.8% growth in 2026 – EM Advisory
1 minute -
Education Minister appeals for end to university staff strike, confirms partial payment of arrears
5 minutes -
British International Investment reinforces commitment to Ghana’s private sector with high‑level leadership visit
8 minutes -
Major General Joseph Narh Adinkrah
18 minutes -
Ghana eyes 4.8% GDP growth in 2026 amid commodity gains and fiscal discipline – EM Advisory
20 minutes -
GRIDCO serves notice of a load redistribution exercise in parts of Volta region
22 minutes -
Tourism and Creative Arts could boost Ghana’s 2026 growth – EM Advisory projects
23 minutes -
Food insecurity rises to 38.1%; 12.5m Ghanaians struggle to access food—GSS
26 minutes -
Mahama opens 66th WACS Conference, calls for stronger surgical capacity in West Africa
27 minutes -
ECG steps up infrastructure investment to deliver reliable power nationwide
27 minutes -
Daily Insight for CEOs: Setting clear performance expectations
30 minutes -
Mothers wrap cleft-lipped babies in polythene to avoid stigma – National Cleft care
42 minutes -
No drumming or dancing at airports without approval – GACL warns
46 minutes -
Tema Central NDC executives lock up NHIS office over alleged exclusionary appointments
54 minutes
