An Iranian general who replaced the leader killed by a U.S. airstrike in Baghdad vowed Sunday to take revenge as Tehran abandoned the remaining limits of its 2015
nuclear deal with world powers in response to the slaying. Esmail Ghaani's threat comes as the blowback over the U.S. killing of top Iranian general Qassem Soleimani mounted Sunday with Iraq’s parliament calling for the expulsion of all
American troops from Iraqi soil. The three developments could bring
Iran closer to building an atomic
bomb, see an proxy or military attack launched by Tehran against America and enable the
Islamic State group to stage a comeback in
Iraq, making the
Middle East a far more dangerous and unstable place.