US still faces threats from Iran-backed forces despite strikes

US still faces threats from Iran-backed forces despite strikes

WASHINGTON

U.S. military action has so far failed to halt attacks by Iran-backed groups on Washington's forces in the Middle East and shipping in the Red Sea, with the threats persisting despite recent heavy air strikes.

The attacks by militants — which the armed groups that claim them say are driven by the Israel-Hamas war — have been launched from or hit four different countries, posing a multi-front challenge for the United States, which aims to curb the unrest while avoiding direct conflict with Iran.

The U.S. hit dozens of Iran-linked targets in Iraq and Syria last week in response to a drone attack that killed three American soldiers in neighboring Jordan, and conducted joint strikes with Britain against Yemeni rebels over the weekend.

But American forces were subsequently targeted in Syria, while the rebels have launched new attacks on merchant vessels.

"I suspect we will have some level of violence persisting for a while. Iran and the groups it supports don't want to announce they've given in," said Jon Alterman, the director of the Middle East Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

"At the same time, I think the number and size of attacks will diminish. This is partly because the U.S. strikes are reducing their capability, and partly because they want to reduce their losses," he said.

 'Appropriate action' 

Asked Monday if the Pentagon was planning for a long campaign in Iraq and Syria, spokesman Major General Pat Ryder said that "as I understand it, that's not the case."

Questioned on whether strikes would continue as long as attacks on U.S. troops persist, Ryder said: "We're going to take whatever necessary actions are required to protect our forces."

Michelle Grise, a senior policy researcher at RAND, said it is "probable that we will see continued proxy attacks for the duration of the Gaza war, although the intensity and frequency of those attacks may change."

She said there is a scenario in which attacks continue even after an end to the war, but that she would "expect an extended ceasefire to lead to a pausing of the current attacks, at least in the immediate term."

Anger over Israel's campaign in Gaza — which began after the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas — has stoked violence involving Iran-backed forces in Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and Yemen.

 Repeated attacks 

American troops in the Middle East have been targeted more than 165 times over the past four months, with many of the attacks claimed by a loose coalition of Tehran-backed armed groups opposed to Washington's support for Israel and the presence of U.S. forces in the region.

Most of the attacks were in Iraq and Syria but one took place in Jordan on Jan. 28, when a drone slammed into sleeping quarters on a remote base, killing three American soldiers and wounding dozens.

The U.S. hit back with a wave of strikes in Iraq and Syria on Friday and said more would follow, but American troops were still attacked in subsequent days, according to the Pentagon.

In Yemen, the Iran-backed Huthi rebels began targeting Red Sea shipping in November, saying they were hitting Israel-linked vessels in support of Palestinians in Gaza.

On Saturday, U.S. and British forces launched their third round of joint strikes against the Huthis since the second week of January, a period during which American forces have also carried out unilateral air raids.

But over the following three days, the U.S. military announced strikes against multiple missiles on the ground in Yemen and two explosive-laden naval drones that posed an "imminent threat," and said the Huthis launched six missiles toward two merchant ships, reportedly lightly damaging one of the vessels.

The U.S. says Tehran is responsible for arming and funding the groups carrying out attacks, but has so far not targeted Iranian territory as it seeks to avoid a potentially devastating war.

"A major direct confrontation threatens to create an open-ended regional war with no clear end point or objectives," Alterman said.

"I don't think the U.S. public wants an open-ended war in the Middle East any more than U.S. partners and allies in the region do."