by Shaun King,

This is how Israeli impunity gets normalized: occupation, violation, and airstrikes are repackaged as military ingenuity. They may be the only nation on earth that would get away with this.

An Iraqi soldier is dead because he got too close to a secret Israeli war base inside his own country.

That is the story.

Not Israel’s “logistical sophistication.” Not the brilliance of its air campaign. Not some admiring Tom Clancy fantasy about special forces moving through the desert. According to a stunning new report from The Wall Street Journal, Israel secretly built a military base in Iraq’s western desert to support its war on Iran — then launched airstrikes against Iraqi troops who almost discovered it.

According to the Journal, Israel set up a clandestine military outpost in the Iraqi desert just before the war with Iran began. The base reportedly housed Israeli special forces, served as a logistical hub for the Israeli air force, and positioned search-and-rescue teams closer to Iran in case Israeli pilots were shot down. The Journal reported that the base was established with the knowledge of U.S. officials.

Let me translate that.

A foreign government built a secret military base inside Iraq, used Iraqi territory to wage war on Iran, and did so with U.S. knowledge.

And Iraq, according to the reporting, did not approve it.

That alone should be a global scandal.

But then it gets worse.

The Journal reported that the base was almost discovered in early March after a local shepherd noticed unusual military activity, including helicopter flights, and Iraqi troops were sent to investigate. As Iraqi soldiers approached the area in Humvees, they came under intense fire. One Iraqi soldier was killed. Two others were wounded.

The Journal says Israel launched airstrikes to keep Iraqi troops away from the site.

Read that again.

Iraqi troops were allegedly attacked inside Iraq while investigating suspicious military activity on Iraqi soil — and the force they were closing in on was reportedly Israeli.

That is not “self-defense.”

That is not “regional security.”

That is a violation of sovereignty so brazen that if Iran, Iraq, Yemen, Lebanon, Syria, or any Palestinian faction had done anything remotely similar, the headlines would be screaming for sanctions, retaliation, and emergency meetings at the United Nations.

When Israel does it, news outlets report it like they are simply impressed.

But this is not just another covert operation.

This is an unauthorized foreign war base.

This is Iraqi territory being used as a platform for Israel’s war.

This is an Iraqi soldier dead after his own military got too close to finding out.

The Iraqi government had already condemned the March attack at the time. Lt. Gen. Qais Al-Muhammadawi, deputy commander of Iraq’s Joint Operations Command, reportedly told Iraqi state media, “This reckless operation was carried out without coordination or approval.” Anadolu and other regional outlets reported the same quote in their summaries of the Journal’s revelations.

That phrase matters: without coordination or approval.

In plain English, Iraq is saying this was not authorized.

And under the United Nations Charter, states are prohibited from using force against the territorial integrity or political independence of another state. “Territorial integrity” simply means a country’s land, borders, and sovereignty cannot be treated like an open battlefield by another government because it finds the location convenient.

That is supposed to be the rule.

Unless, apparently, the violator is Israel.

Then everything gets softened.

A secret base becomes a “clandestine outpost.”

A war crime question becomes an “operational risk.”

A dead Iraqi soldier becomes background detail.

U.S. knowledge becomes a passing line instead of a flashing red warning.

And Israeli airstrikes against Iraqi troops become part of a story about how Israel “managed” to project power across the region.

This is how impunity is manufactured.

Not always through outright lies. Sometimes through tone. Through placement. Through what gets emphasized and what gets buried. Through whether the reader is invited to be outraged or impressed.

If a foreign military secretly built a base in Texas, Arizona, or New Mexico, and then bombed U.S. troops who went to investigate, nobody would call it a daring forward-operating site.

They would call it an act of war.

If Iran secretly built a military base in Iraq to attack Israel, then killed Iraqi soldiers who came too close, American officials would be on television before sunset calling it terrorism, aggression, destabilization, and proof of Iran’s evil.

But when Israel is accused of doing it, the media language becomes strangely calm.

That is the double standard.

And it is not harmless.

This report also deepens something we have been seeing throughout this war: the American public has not been told the full truth about how wide this conflict really is. The war was sold as a focused campaign against Iran. But the receipts keep showing something much bigger — U.S. bases hit across the region, Iranian oil routes under blockade, the Strait of Hormuz in crisis, Lebanon bombed, Iraq dragged in, and now, according to the Journal, a secret Israeli base on Iraqi soil.

This was never contained.

It was regional from the start.

And once again, Iraq becomes a stage for other people’s wars.

Iraq has already endured invasion, occupation, sanctions, torture sites, drone strikes, proxy battles, ISIS, militias, U.S. bases, Iranian influence, Turkish attacks, and endless violations of its sovereignty by governments that claim to respect international law while treating Iraqi land like a chessboard.

Now we are told Israel secretly built a war base there too.

And when Iraqi soldiers almost found it, one of them died.

I keep coming back to that soldier.

Because empire loves abstractions. “Forward-operating base.” “Search-and-rescue hub.” “Air campaign.” “Special missions.” “Strategic depth.”

But a man died.

An Iraqi soldier died on Iraqi soil because he was doing what soldiers are supposed to do: investigating unauthorized military activity inside his own country. I am working to learn more about him now.

His life should not be reduced to a footnote in a story about Israeli efficiency.

His death should force the central question:

Who gave Israel the right to build a secret war base inside Iraq?

And if the United States knew, what exactly did Washington know? When did it know it? Did it object? Did it warn Iraq? Did it quietly allow Israel to use Iraqi territory while pretending this war was cleaner and more contained than it really was?

Those are not minor questions.

They are the questions every serious journalist, every member of Congress, every Iraqi official, and every international law scholar should be asking right now.

But I already know how this normally works.

When Israel violates sovereignty, officials call it complicated.

When Israel bombs another country, pundits call it security.

When Israel kills, maims, occupies, invades, or spies, headlines reach for the softest possible verbs.

And when the victims are Arab or Muslim, the world is trained to move on.

No.

Not this time.

A secret base inside Iraq is not normal.

Bombing Iraqi troops who nearly found it is not normal.

Using Iraq as a staging ground for war with Iran is not normal.

Doing it with U.S. knowledge is not normal.

And dressing all of this up as military ingenuity is not journalism. It is laundering power.

The real story is simple.

Israel secretly built and defended a war base inside Iraq. Iraqi troops nearly discovered it. Israel struck them. One Iraqi soldier was killed. Iraq said the operation had no coordination or approval. And the United States reportedly knew the base existed.

That is the scandal.

Not how clever the base was.

Not how useful it was to Israel.

Not how far Iran is from Tel Aviv.

The scandal is that Iraq’s sovereignty was treated like an obstacle, an Iraqi soldier’s life was treated like collateral, and the public is now being asked to admire the machinery that made it happen.

I refuse.

 

Source: https://www.thenorthstar.com

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