Baghdad Is Blocking US Deployment of Patriot Air Defense Systems to Iraq

The Pentagon is trying to move one battery from Saudi Arabia but it's stuck in Kuwait as Iraqis won't let it in

Trump had been thinking of assassinating Soleimani for 7 months but had not made sure US troops in Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, and Kuwait had missile defenses before he did it. There were US air defenses aplenty for Saudi oil installations however

The story is from January 30th. It slipped through the cracks at the time but it’s still relevant. Iraq has still not granted permission. Indeed, since Iraq is trying to get the Americans to leave what would be the point of allowing more of their assets in?

Perhaps if the US was willing to defend Iraqi airspace from illegal Israeli strikes on Iraq of the kind we saw last year Baghdad would think differently but that is never going to happen.

The Jerusalem Post further elaborates the Pentagon is trying to move one battery from Saudi Arabia but it’s stuck in Kuwait as Iraqis won’t let it in.


The U.S. military wants to send Patriot surface-to-air missile units to Iraq in the wake of unprecedented Iranian ballistic missile strikes aimed at American forces in the country earlier this month, which the Pentagon now says caused dozens of injuries in addition to significant damage to facilities at Al Asad Air Base. However, the U.S. government still needs permission from authorities in Iraq to do so, approval that has so far not been forthcoming, something The War Zone‘s Tyler Rogoway had raised as a likely issue immediately following Iran’s strikes. Discussions regarding the potential deployment of the air defense are ongoing, but come amid attempts by certain Iraqi factions to secure the withdrawal of all U.S. troops from the country.

U.S. Secretary of Defense Mark Esper and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff U.S. Army General Mark Milley explained the situation in response to a question from Fox News‘ Jennifer Griffin at a press conference on Jan. 30, 2020. There were reports last week that the U.S. military was considering deploying Patriot systems to Iraq. There has been increasing attention in the press and among the general public on the issue of American air and missile defenses in the country after it emerged that there were no such assets in place when Iran fired a flurry of ballistic missiles at U.S. forces at Al Asad, as well as Erbil International Airport, on Jan. 7. Those strikes had been in retaliation for the U.S. decision to kill Qasem Soleimani, then the head of Iran’s Quds Force, on Jan. 3.

General Milley told reporters at the press conference that U.S. government is “working with the Iraqi government” on the potential Patriot deployment. “The mechanics of it all need to be worked out, and that is ongoing,” Milley said, adding that he definitely felt there was a need for air and missile defense systems in Iraq.

Neither Milley nor Esper offered any details on how many Patriot batteries they were looking to send to Iraq or where they might be positioned. A typical U.S. Army Patriot battery includes up to eight trailer-mounted launchers, an AN/MPQ-65 multifunction phased array radar, and requisite fire control, communications, and other support equipment. The AN/MPQ-65 are capable of searching for and tracking potential threats, as well as cueing the system’s missile to engage them.

There are also a variety of interceptors available for use with the Patriot system. The latest PAC-3 Missile Segment Enhancement (MSE) interceptor, which entered full-rate production in 2018, is an improved hit-to-kill design, meaning that it destroys the incoming threat by physically smashing into it, rather than using an explosive warhead. The PAC-3 MSE, which you can read about more in this past War Zone piece, is well suited to engaging shorter-range tactical ballistic missiles, such as the ones Iran employed in its strikes aimed at U.S. forces in Iraq earlier this month.

No matter what the size or composition of the projected force might be, the talks with Iraqi authorities are undoubtedly fraught with tension given calls for all U.S. forces to leave from certain factions with the country’s parliament, especially pro-Iranian parties, as well as the country’s own caretaker Prime Minister, Adil Abdul-Mahdi. “The [American] troops’ attempt to deploy Patriot missile systems in their bases in order to beef up their combat capabilities is rejected and considered a violation of our sovereignty,” Karim Alawi, who sits on the Iraqi Parliament’s security and defense committee, reportedly told Baghdad Today last week.

The possibility that diplomatic tensions were at least part of the reason why U.S. had not deployed Patriots to Iraq before or after the Iranian missiles strikes is something the War Zone‘s Tyler Rogoway had raised on Twitter almost immediately thereafter.

Given the U.S. government’s unilateral decision to kill Soleimani on Iraqi soil, Iraqi politicians and other government officials who are already predisposed to being wary of America’s continued military presence in the country may also have concerns about whether any American Patriots might pose a threat to Iraqi forces in the future, should relations deteriorate further.

The U.S. military has already halted deliveries of weapons, ammunition, and other military equipment, including items related to the country’s fleet of American-made F-16IQ Viper fighter jets, until such time as “the environment in Iraq is safe enough to resume” those shipments, Inside Defense reported on Jan. 27. At the same time, the Iraqi government did announce the resumption of combined operations with U.S. and other coalition forces against ISIS terrorists, which were suspended after the Soleimani strike, on Jan. 30.

For its part, the U.S. government has repeatedly denied that it has any plans to withdraw from Iraq completely. Still, there have been indications that American officials may be considering drawdowns or otherwise reshuffling forces inside the country.

“We are down to 5,000 soldiers [in Iraq], and going down,” U.S. President Donald Trump had written in a Tweet on Jan. 29. There was also particularly bizarre series of events earlier in January, in which U.S. military officials apparently inadvertently sent a letter to their Iraqi counterparts discussion preparations for the removal of at least some U.S. troops.

While the issue of Iraqi approval for the potential Patriot deployment is certainly the most immediate hurdle to sending those systems to Iraq, there are other important factors at play, as well. For one, it’s hard to fathom how the U.S. military did not ensure this was taken care of earlier when the Central Intelligence Agency reportedly assessed that an Iranian ballistic missile strike on U.S. targets in the Middle East was one of the most likely responses to the U.S. killing Qasem Soleimani. The War Zone had also highlighted the threat Iran’s ballistic missile arsenal posed to U.S. base in the region, which was also what had prompted the U.S. Air Force to deploy  B-52 bombers to Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, out of range of these weapons, after Soleimani’s death.

It’s impossible that U.S. commanders in the region and at the Pentagon would have been unaware of this glaring lack of air and missile defenses in Iraq to respond to that scenario, which is exactly what happened. Even before it launched the strike that killed Soleimani, the U.S. government had been warning for months about intelligence pointing to increased risks of potential threats from Iran and its regional proxies, including the possible movement of ballistic missiles into Iraq.

The Army had sent Patriot batteries to Iraq following the U.S.-led invasion of the country in 2003, which remained there for a time as part of the subsequent occupation, but the service removed them as the prospect of major air and missile threats evaporated. It’s unclear when exactly the U.S. military withdrew the Patriots from Iraq, but there is evidence that they were not being actively employed even before they were pulled out of the country entirely. One years old satellite image does appear to show an AN/MPQ-53 or AN/MPQ-65 radar in position at Al Asad, but possible Patriot missile launchers seen in the same imagery are not in a deployed configuration.

Regardless, imagery that The War Zone exclusively obtained from Planet Labs of Al Asad in the immediate aftermath of the Iranian ballistic missile strikes on Jan. 7 confirms the Pentagon’s own statements that there were no Patriot missile systems at the base at the time. At least as of the end of 2018, the Army was still operating land-based versions of the U.S. Navy’s Mk 15 Phalanx close-in weapon system in Iraq in the counter-rockets, artillery, and mortars, or C-RAM, role, including one at Al Asad. These systems would not have been capable of engaging incoming Iranian ballistic missiles.

The decision to proceed with the strike that killed Soleimani despite the obvious risks has become all the more galling as the Pentagon continued to revise its figures about the total number of U.S. casualties that resulted from the subsequent Iranian ballistic missile strikes. The U.S. government initially said that there were no casualties at all, but has now confirmed that at least 64 individuals [and later over 100] have been diagnosed with traumatic brain injuries as a direct result of Iran’s strikes on Al Asad. More than 200 people were within the blast zones of the impacting missiles.

The entire situation also underscores the relatively limited number of Patriot units that the Army has available, in total. This is, in part, a product of significant cuts to U.S. military air and missile defense capabilities, in general, after the end of the Cold War, which were even more pronounced when it came to reductions in short-range air defenses. At present, the service has 18 Air Defense Artillery Battalions equipped with Patriot, each of which typically has between three and five batteries, depending on its exact organization. Two of these are dedicated training units. Five of them are forward-deployed overseas, two in Germany, two in South Korea, and one in Japan.

This leaves just 11, around 60 percent of the Army’s total Patriot force, available to respond to contingencies around the world. Typical readiness cycles mean that not all of the batteries within these battalions would ready to head out an operational assignment at once, either.

A number of these units are already on shorter duration deployments abroad, too. There are four U.S. Patriot batteries now in Saudi Arabia, according to The Washington Post. At least one of these was already in place by July 2019, but the Army sent more in the wake of unprecedented Iranian-sponsored suicide drone and cruise missile attacks in September of that year.

Their exact disposition is unclear, but the Pentagon had said they would help guard “critical military and civilian infrastructure” in the Kingdom. At least two batteries are at Prince Sultan Air Base. The other two could be at the Abqaiq oil processing facility and the Khurais oil field, the sites that suffered the cruise missile and drone attacks in September 2019.

All of these batteries were all in place in Saudi Arabia at the time of the Iranian ballistic missile barrage targeting U.S. forces in Iraq. Patriot units also rotate through deployments to Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar and Al Dhafra Air Base in the United Arab Emirates, too.

Underscoring the strain on available Army Patriot missile systems, in 2018, then-Secretary of Defense James Mattis had directed the withdrawal of batteries from Bahrain, Jordan, and Kuwait, ostensibly to free them up for deployment elsewhere. This would have also left U.S. military facilities in those countries vulnerable to Iranian missile and drone strikes in the wake of the killing of Qasem Soleimani.

The Pentagon is now reportedly looking at shifting the Patriot unit presently in Saudi Arabia to Iraq, which only further highlights the limited capacity of the Army’s overall Patriot force.

Some may take issue with the fact that U.S. Patriots are presently guarding areas of Saudi Arabia, but were apparently not available to protect American troops in Iraq from the very likely possibility of an Iranian counter-strike of some kind following Soleimani’s death. While it’s certainly true that there are diplomatic barriers to sending the surface-to-air missiles systems to Iraq, it’s worth pointing out that the U.S. government ignored any such protocols when it decided to kill the Quds Force commander right outside Baghdad International Airport. American officials had also apparently disregarded potential diplomatic concerns when they approved earlier airstrikes on Iranian-backed Iraqi militias on both sides of the Iraq-Syria border in December 2019.

Of course, It’s also important to remember that even if Patriot missile systems had been in place in Iraq at the time of the Jan. 7 Iranian ballistic missile strikes that this would not have provided an absolute defense against those threats. While the latest Patriot systems are vastly more capable than the much-maligned versions that were employed during the first Persian Gulf War in 1990-1991, there is simply no such thing as a perfect missile defense shield, something the War Zone has explored in detail in the past.

It remains to be seen when, and if, the U.S. military will actually send Patriots to Iraq and what the exact composition and distribution of any such air defense force might look like in the country. There is clearly a need to provide at least some level of defense against air and missile threats aimed at American personnel in the country.

Still, the attention the Pentagon is now giving to the issue is probably small comfort to the dozens of American personnel who now suffer from traumatic brain injuries following the Iranian ballistic missile strikes earlier this month.

Source: The Drive

16 Comments
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  2. Brion Adair says

    Funny how the American Government claims to bring “Freedom and Democracy” but when the freely elected Government of Iraq democratically sends ’em packing because they’ve all had enough “Freedom and Democracy” American style where the US ignores them because they didn’t “democratically” vote the way they wanted.

    How long this will go on before the region loses patience with the arrogance and does a repeat of the Battle of the Little Bighorn is anybody’s guess but I’d say it was soon.

  3. Brion Adair says

    Seems Iraqis aren’t the only ones experiencing the arrogance of the US Military. The chickens it seems have come home to roost:

    https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/02/20/how-the-military-is-raiding-public-lands-and-civilian-spaces-across-the-western-front/

  4. Mary E says

    Well of course Iraq isn’t giving permission for the US Patriot missiles to be brought into the country!!! Why would they? The US has been ‘petitioned’ to leave Iraq – totally..
    but the leaches just won’t let loose and most likely will never ever leave…unless some kind of miraculous event happens….like Russia decides to join with Iran and get rid of them…but that would be a long shot. Oh those pushy Americans! They never give up.
    Someday….someway, though, it will have to happen.

  5. thomas malthaus says

    My understanding is Iraq is going to receive S-300s, S-400s, a Russian airbase and a few infantry garrisons.

    1. Mary E says

      Now we’re talking!! Iraq is finally getting its ‘self’ back….thanks to a few of their friends! –

      1. thomas malthaus says

        Perhaps the question will be, “Where will a major Russia-US conflict be ignited?” Turkey? Syria? Iraq? None of the above or all three simultaneously?

        I’m not worried about Mr. Putin intentions. It’s Netanyahu trying to gouge President Trump and how the former may be playing the Russian president..

        The global fight against the coronavirus and the ensuing financial damage may put these geopolitical hotspots on either the backburner or further inflame them.

        Life on a knife’s edge.

    2. CHUCKMAN says

      They are talking about the anti-aircraft missiles.

      I think nothing is certain, except the US is unhappy even with talk.

      It is a sign of how stupidly hard the US has pushed matters in someone else’s country.

  6. Grand Nagus Zek says

    there or not there doesn’t make a difference, the patriot and THAAD are both overpriced useless pieces of crap.
    They didn’t work in Saudi why would they work in Iraq?
    Can’t wait to see them in action in Iraq – the world will see how useless Yank systems are

  7. tom greg says

    The sh!t will hit the fan any day now…or so it seems.

    1. michael houston says

      i think that goes even without saying it….the stage has been set….players in position…..the curtain is soon to be raised…..

  8. TB Wong says

    It may be a blessing in disguise not to position the Patriot system to guard the us base in Iraq. Can you imagine the consequences if the patriot system could not intercept the Iranian missiles? It will be the final nail in the coffin for the patriot system.

  9. CHUCKMAN says

    Interesting development.

    Of course, Iraq can control what enters the country.

    But can there be any doubt that there will be consequences from good old America, Land of Liberty?

  10. Natural_Texan says

    US Defense and War Systems certainly come with a BUG that allows them to be disabled or re-targeted. Trojan Horses. Iraq needs to assert it’s sovereignty. Not to cause problems for America and not to kill or wound Americans but to simply stop the US led instability and murder in the entire region.

  11. AriusArmenian says

    The attack on Saudi oil facilities showed that the Patriots are useless.

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