Breaking News
*Trump Says U.S. Will Not Leave Iraq Unless the Country Repays Billions for Air Base.
*Trump Threatens Sanctions If Iraq Asks the U.S. to Leave
(More to come)
Iraq’s parliament voted Sunday in favor of expelling U.S. troops after a U.S. airstrike killed a powerful Iranian general on its soil, putting the country at the center of an escalating conflict between Tehran and Washington.
The nonbinding resolution—passed with the backing of Shiite politicians—urges Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi to rescind Iraq’s invitation to U.S. forces that helped rescue the country after Islamic State overran about one third of its territory in 2014.
Mr. Abdul-Mahdi called on lawmakers to support the resolution, but it wasn’t clear how he would proceed. He resigned as prime minister last year and has since presided over a caretaker government.
The vote showed how the backlash against Maj. Gen. Qassem Soleimani’s killing is weighing on relations between the U.S. and Iraq, pushing the Baghdad government into closer alignment with Tehran. It throws further doubt on the future of the 5,000 U.S. troops in Iraq and the campaign against Islamic State at a time the militants are seeking to regroup.
Mr. Abdul-Mahdi and politicians said the U.S. had violated Iraq’s sovereignty with its strikes targeting Gen. Soleimani, the architect of deadly Iranian shadow wars throughout the Middle East, and top Iraqi paramilitary commander Abu Mahdi al-Mohandes.
Lawmakers during and after the session chanted: “Out, out, occupier! No, no to America! No, no to Israel!” See More Coverage ›