BAGHDAD: Iraqi demonstrators brandish flags and placards as they rally in Tahrir Square yesterday to mark one year after a US drone strike killed Iranian commander Qasem Soleimani and his Iraqi lieutenant Abu Mahdi Al-Muhandis. - AFP

BAGHDAD: Thousands of Iraqi mourners chanted "revenge" and "no to America" yesterday, one year after a US drone strike killed Iran's revered commander Qasem Soleimani and his Iraqi lieutenant Abu Mahdi Al-Muhandis. Pro-Iranian supporters, many dressed in black, massed in Baghdad's central Tahrir Square to also condemn Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhemi as a "coward" and an "agent of the Americans".

The anniversary of the Baghdad drone strike - which brought Washington and Tehran to the brink of war in early 2020 - was also marked in recent days across Iran and by supporters in Syria, Lebanon, Yemen and elsewhere. The lead up to the commemorations of the Shiite commanders sharply heightened regional tensions in the weeks before US President Donald Trump, who ordered the killings, leaves the White House.

Iran has held a series of commemorative events for the "martyr" Soleimani, who has been immortalized in portraits, sculptures, ballads and an upcoming TV series. Tehran yesterday also unveiled his autobiography - focusing largely on his childhood and early adulthood - and a postage stamp in his honor.

In Iraq, the powerful, state-sponsored pro-Iranian Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary network which Muhandis commanded has led the angry vigils for him and General Soleimani, who headed the foreign operations arm of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Yesterday's Baghdad rally was a show of force for the armed groups, which despite being formally integrated into the Iraqi security apparatus have increasingly challenged the Kadhemi government.

Thousands of mourners had Saturday night converged at the spot near Baghdad's international airport where the US hit the two vehicles and killed Soleimani, Muhandis and eight other men. By candlelight, they honored their "martyrs" and condemned the American "great Satan" at the site where nearby walls are still pockmarked by shrapnel. "We tell America and the enemies of Islam that they can inflict the greatest sacrifices on us, but we will continue to resist despite the bloodshed," said Hashed supporter Batul Najjar.

The Hashed - factions of which Washington has blamed for rocket strikes against its embassy and troops in Iraq - has increasingly challenged Kadhemi, whom it accuses of having helped plot the drone strikes. This has brought to the boil once more tensions in the war-battered and politically fragile country which the United States invaded in 2003, and which remains mired in economic crisis amid low oil prices and the coronavirus pandemic.

Ahead of the Tahrir Square rally, Ahmed Assadi, one of the leaders of Hashed's parliamentary bloc, vowed: "Abu Mahdi Al-Muhandis, we will go out by the millions to brandish your portrait on Tahrir". Giant posters of Soleimani and Muhandis were hung up above the iconic square, which in late 2019 became the center of large anti-government protests, from an abandoned building known as the Turkish restaurant that was once the protesters' unofficial headquarters.

"We have come to say no to America and to any other occupier who wants to come and defile our land," one of the mourners, Oum Mariam, told AFP. After the Soleimani killing, Iraq's parliament initially voted to expel US forces - but despite some withdrawals, about 3,000 American troops remain in the country. Amid the flaring tensions, Iraqis, and many in the wider region, are nervously watching for any signs of escalation before Trump leaves the White House on Jan 20.

Trump confronted longtime foe Iran by withdrawing in 2018 from its nuclear deal with world powers and launching a "maximum pressure" campaign to further economically punish and isolate the country. Trump recently tweeted that the US was hearing "chatter of additional attacks against Americans in Iraq", and warned that "if one American is killed, I will hold Iran responsible. Think it over."

In recent days, US B-52 bombers have flown across the region for the second time in less than a month but, in what some read as a sign of de-escalation, Washington has also reportedly ordered its Nimitz aircraft carrier to leave the Gulf. Iran's Revolutionary Guards chief Hossein Salami vowed Saturday to respond to any "action the enemy takes", as he visited a strategic Gulf island amid rising tensions with the US.

"We are here today to evaluate and be assured of our powerful capabilities at sea and against enemies who sometimes boast… and threaten," Salami said, according to the Guards' official website Sepahnews. Salami inspected troops stationed on Abu Musa island, accompanied by the Revolutionary Guard Corps navy commander Rear Admiral Alireza Tangsiri.

"We would respond with a reciprocal, decisive and strong blow to whatever action the enemy would take against us," Salami warned. Iran and the United States - bitter foes since the 1979 Iranian Islamic revolution and the US embassy hostage crisis in Tehran - have twice come to the brink of war since June 2019, most recently after Soleimani's killing.

Abu Musa and the Greater and Lesser Tunb islands are located in the Gulf near the entrance to the strategic Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of world oil output passes. The islands are under Iranian control but are also claimed by the United Arab Emirates. On Dec 25, the Guards naval chief visited the other two islands also claimed by the UAE and emphasized the importance of their garrisons' "combat-readiness and awareness", Iran's ISNA news agency reported.

Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on Thursday accused Trump of aiming to fabricate a "pretext for war", after the president blamed Tehran for a Dec 20 rocket strike on the US embassy in Baghdad. In the war of words, Zarif on Saturday also claimed that, in Iraq, "Israeli agent-provocateurs are plotting attacks against Americans (to put) Trump in a bind with a fake casus belli". "Be careful of a trap," Zarif tweeted at Trump, saying that "any fireworks will backfire badly, particularly against your same BFFs." - AFP