Iraq’s Shiite Militias To The Rescue: Force for Sectarian Unity Or Thorn In Anbar’s Side?
niqash | Mustafa Habib | Baghdad | 13.11.2014
Members of tribes in Anbar province with guns earlier this year: they plan to defend their own territory and remain neutral.
Shiite militias are making inroads into the mainly Sunni province of Anbar.
Previously Anbar’s Sunni tribes have not allowed the controversial
militia groups in but now one tribe has invited them to help. Things are
becoming ever more complex in Anbar and the arrival of US troops, who,
it seems, will be staying at the same base as the Iran-sponsored
militias, are complicating things further.
Last week, hundreds of members of Iraq’s Shiite Muslim
militias arrived at a military base in the province of Anbar. Up until
now the militias – who are not regular Iraqi army but who share the
army’s goal of fighting the Sunni Muslim extremist group known as the
Islamic State – have confined their activities to areas bordering
Baghdad and Fallujah. Their mission seems to have been to protect
Baghdad if the Iraqi army, plagued by low morale, corruption and lack of
equipment, cannot.
But the Shiite Muslim militias are controversial, not
least because they’re not official representatives of the Iraqi
government. While they know how to fight and have achieved some
important victories recently, many are also backed by Iran and most
recently, there have been reports that Shiite Muslim militias have been
terrorising the Sunni Muslim populations in areas they control – that
is, engaging in their own sectarian cleansing campaigns, in a similar
way to what the Islamic State group is doing.
No wonder then, that many Sunni Muslim tribes say they
won’t support the Iraqi government until the Shiite militias are
withdrawn; they see them as an occupying force. The Sunni Muslim people
of Anbar feel this way in particular – they have very strong feelings
about Shiite Muslim fighters being in their area.
Which is why the arrival of hundreds of troops at the Ain
al-Asad military base, about 200 kilometres west of Baghdad, for the
first time is a big deal. “About 300 members of
the Badr forces have arrived at Ain al-Asad military base,” a senior
Iraqi army commander told NIQASH; he could not be named because he is
not authorised to speak on the subject.
Apparently the reason that the Shiite Muslim militias
continue to arrive in Anbar is thanks to the al-Bu Nimr tribe. The
Islamic State group has killed or detained hundreds of members of the
tribe because the tribe has supported the Iraqi government against them.
Desperate for help, the al-Bu Nimr elders asked for aid from the Shiite
Muslim militias.
Despite the fact that some have suggested the alliance
between Sunni tribal fighters, Shiite militias and the Iraqi army could
prove a successful model of sectarian unity for future campaigns against
the IS group, the issue remains a troubling one for many Anbar locals.
Tribal heads elsewhere in the province have called
meetings with the al-Bu Nimr leaders because the majority of Anbar’s
tribes, who are Sunni, have not allowed the Shiite Muslim militias into
the province. The tribes hate these militias as much as, and possibly
more than, the IS group itself.
“Most of the tribes in Anbar as well as Sunni Muslim
militias like the Islamic Army in Iraq, the Mujahideen Army and the
1920s Revolution Brigades, are strongly opposed to what the al-Bu Nimr
people did,” one of Anbar’s tribal leaders, Naseer al-Mohammedi, told
NIQASH.
Most of the factions opposed to the al-Bu Nimr tribe’s
invitation to the Shiite militias are those who have expressed an
intention to remain neutral in the conflict. They will protect their own
territory, they say, and they will defend it if attacked. But they
won’t support the IS group and nor will they support the Iraqi
government, which they mistrust.
At the same time as Shiite militias have entered Anbar,
reports indicate that at least some of the 1,500 US military advisers
sent to Iraq by US President, Barack Obama, will also be headed here –
and possibly to the same Ain al-Asad airbase. Which means that the
Iran-backed Shiite Muslim militias must be interacting with the
Americans.
Some analysts have suggested that there is now a race on
between the US and Iran to see who can wield the most influence on the
ground in Iraq – and if it isn’t a race, then it is certainly
cooperation, whether tacit or implicit.
Shiite Muslim militias have gained some important victories recently, most notably in Tikrit and Jurf al-Sakhar.
On the other hand, much of the action against the IS group has only
been possible because of the air cover provided by the US-led
international alliance.
The US has also put in a lot of work trying to win the
support of Sunni Muslim tribes in the Anbar province – this is something
Iran, being a Shiite Muslim-led theocracy, cannot do.
Information from inside Iraq’s security forces says that
there are now a number of tribes working directly with Washington,
especially on intelligence: their information is behind the success of
US air strikes on the IS group.
No comments:
Post a Comment