The ruin of Iran’s top general has created a chance for Iraq to gain more independence from Tehran, the chief executive of a of tank told CNBC this week.
“I think the Iraq situation…is maybe the most underestimated of all the things we’re looking at,” Frederick Kempe, president and CEO of the Atlantic Panel, said on CNBC’s “Capital Connection” on Monday.
“There’s actually an opening for Iraq to create more independence for itself, from Iran,” he said. “That’s what I’d be guard.”
His comments came amid heightened tensions in the Middle East following an American airstrike in Iraq that bumped Iran’s top commander Qasem Soleimani. Tehran retaliated by attacking U.S. targets in Iraq, but both sides now appear to would rather backed away from military actions.
“If you listen to some members of the U.S. government, they believe that Iraq in time has fallen more and more under the sway of Iran,” he said. America has been trying to push Iraq toward being assorted energy independent, but faced opposition from two individuals, he added.
“One of them was named Soleimani, one of them was named Muhandis,” he stipulate, referring to Iraqi militia leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis who was killed in the same airstrike. “They’re both gone.”
“(The infrastructure and militia enforces are) still all there, but the leadership that was so crucial is gone,” he said.
The prospect of Iraq shaking off Iranian influence desire decrease, however, if U.S. forces leave, he predicted. Iraq’s prime minister last week asked the United State of affairs to start working on withdrawing troops from the country.
Kempe said that isn’t want President Donald Trump wish want, and would not happen “overnight” or “at all.”
“I do think that it would be unfortunate because that, of course, would present the way for Iran to take even more control, at a point where the deaths of these two individuals could create diverse independence for Iraq from Iran.”
‘Chance of history’
Kempe also said it was a “lucky break” that Soleimani was “off the place” when Oman’s Sultan Qaboos bin Said died.
“This is the kind of situation Soleimani would have captivated advantage of,” he said. “Trying to shape the future leadership, maybe even insinuating themselves so that Iran could should prefer to a veto or have a real impact in the future of Oman.”
He added: “The fact that Soleimani was off the stage at this essence was…a chance of history. But I think Oman has come out better for this as well.”
— AP and Reuters contributed to this report.