The US’ response to the drone attack in Jordan that killed and wounded US service members on Sunday is likely to be more powerful than previous American retaliatory strikes in Iraq and Syria, officials told CNN, though the Pentagon and White House are being careful not to telegraph the administration’s plans.

President Joe Biden is under increasing pressure to respond in a way that stops these attacks for good. Iran-backed militants have targeted US military facilities in Iraq and Syria over 160 times since October, and several Republican lawmakers have called for the US to hit inside Iran directly to send a clear message.

But the biggest challenge now for the Biden administration is how to respond to the drone strike – the deadliest attack on US forces in the region since the bombing at Abbey Gate killed 13 US service members in the closing days of the Afghanistan withdrawal – without sparking a regional war.

  • @[email protected]
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    510 months ago

    If you don’t want a war then they should leave.

    Events outside the borders of the USA will still affect the USA, and there’s no amount of influence the USA can cede to Iran that will satisfy them. Containment is necessary and less difficult now than it would be later. It would have been even less difficult before the USA squandered so much of its power and influence in Iraq and Afghanistan, but that fact doesn’t mean that the correct future policy regarding the region should be a very passive one.

    • @Doorbook
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      410 months ago

      As an Iranian person if the government says look what the USA doing to your brothers and family in Iraq, Syria, Palestine. Look at what they do to Palestinians in west bank with continuous colonization and in Gaza suppotred by the USA. This will definitely lead to more radicalized people who want them out.

      Now if the USA left the region. What the Iranian will say to their people? Lets fight USA ? They will be asking why we need to fight them ? In fact most likely they will be overthrowing the current government and end up in a new revolution.

      I am not sure what you mean by your last sentence. Iraq after Sadam has more Iranian influence thay before. And Afghanistan might also have more influence from Iran than before.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        Regarding Iraq, definitely more Iranian influence after the US attacked, regarding Afghanistan, it’s more Pakistan I feel and even they don’t control them.

        Finally, before this whole mess, there were some overtures to pulling out the troops out of the region and apparently proper talks had begun

    • @bhmnscmm
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      410 months ago

      That’s been the argument for 45 years. “Gotta have bases over there. Gotta make sure we can manipulate these countries, don’t want them doing something we don’t like.”

      What has it gotten us? Are we in a better position now? Are the people who live there in a better position?

      • BombOmOm
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        10 months ago

        Are we in a better position now?

        Better than if countries in middle east were blowing up whatever they wanted? Absolutely.

        Kuwait exists as a country because the west is in the Middle East. Global markets depend on the waterways around the middle east being clear and oil from the middle east pumping.

        • @bhmnscmm
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          10 months ago

          So we can claim one tiny country 34 years ago as a victory. Meanwhile, the rest of the middle east has turned into a disaster compared to what it was in the 60s. That’s all due to American/western meddling for the last half century. These countries are in a position of “blowing up whatever they want” because of the US.

          Creating problems, thn kinda sorta halfway fixing them is not a sustainable strategy.