What does it mean when the United States opens its largest consulate on Earth in Iraq, a country that still bears the scars of America’s most catastrophic foreign-policy gamble? This isn’t charity. This is strategy. But what exactly is Washington trying to reclaim in a region where its influence has been steadily shrinking? Iran has entrenched itself across Iraq’s politics, militias, economy, and borders. Baghdad depends on Iranian electricity. Iraqi armed groups answer to Tehran before they answer to the state. And the U.S.? It’s trying to plant a diplomatic fortress right in the middle of Iran’s backyard. So the real question is: Can America meaningfully shape Iraq’s future without confronting the ghosts of 2003 or the reality that Tehran, not Washington, now has home-field advantage? And is this new “super-consulate” a symbol of renewed commitment or a last attempt to stay relevant? Ananya Dutta decodes.
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