Special Report: How Iran’s military chiefs operate in Iraq
BAGHDAD |
By Ned Parker, Babak Dehghanpisheh and Isabel Coles
BAGHDAD
(Reuters) – The face stares out from multiple billboards in central
Baghdad, a grey-haired general casting a watchful eye across the Iraqi
capital. This military commander is not Iraqi, though. He’s Iranian.
The posters are a recent arrival, reflecting the influence Iran now wields in Baghdad.
Iraq
is a mainly Arab country. Its citizens, Shi’ite and Sunni Muslims
alike, have long mistrusted Iran, the Persian nation to the east. But as
Baghdad struggles to fight the Sunni extremist group Islamic State,
many Shi’ite Iraqis now look to Iran, a Shi’ite theocracy, as their main
ally.
Until
now, little has been known about the body. But in a series of
interviews with Reuters, key Iraqi figures inside Hashid Shaabi have
detailed the ways the paramilitary groups, Baghdad and Iran collaborate,
and the role Iranian advisers play both inside the group and on the
frontlines.
Those
who spoke to Reuters include two senior figures in the Badr
Organisation, perhaps the single most powerful Shi’ite paramilitary
group, and the commander of a relatively new militia called Saraya
al-Khorasani.
In
all, Hashid Shaabi oversees and coordinates several dozen factions. The
insiders say most of the groups followed a call to arms by Iraq’s
leading Shi’ite cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. But they also
cite the religious guidance of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme
leader of Iran, as a key factor in their decision to fight and – as they
see it – defend Iraq.
Hadi
al-Amiri, the leader of the Badr Organisation, told Reuters: “The
majority of us believe that … Khamenei has all the qualifications as an
Islamic leader. He is the leader not only for Iranians but the Islamic
nation. I believe so and I take pride in it.”
He insisted there was no conflict between his role as an Iraqi political and military leader and his fealty to Khamenei.
FROM BATTLEFIELD TO HOSPITAL
Hashid
Shaabi is headed by Jamal Jaafar Mohammed, better known by his nom de
guerre Abu Mahdi al-Mohandis, a former Badr commander who once plotted
against Saddam Hussein and whom American officials have accused of
bombing the U.S. embassy in Kuwait in 1983.
The
body he heads helps coordinate everything from logistics to military
operations against Islamic State. Its members say Mohandis’ close
friendships with both Soleimani and Amiri helps anchor the
collaboration.
The
men have known each other for more than 20 years, according to Muen
al-Kadhimi, a Badr Organisation leader in western Baghdad. “If we look
at this history,” Kadhimi said, “it helped significantly in organizing
the Hashid Shaabi and creating a force that achieved a victory that
250,000 (Iraqi) soldiers and 600,000 interior ministry police failed to
do.”
Kadhimi said
the main leadership team usually consulted for three to four weeks
before major military campaigns. “We look at the battle from all
directions, from first determining the field … how to distribute
assignments within the Hashid Shaabi battalions, consult battalion
commanders and the logistics,” he said.
Soleimani,
he said, “participates in the operation command center from the start
of the battle to the end, and the last thing (he) does is visit the
battle’s wounded in the hospital.”
Iraqi
officials say Tehran’s involvement is driven by its belief that Islamic
State is an immediate danger to Shi’ite religious shrines not just in
Iraq but also in Iran. Shrines in both nations, but especially in Iraq,
rank among the sect’s most sacred.
The
Iranians, the Iraqi officials say, helped organize the Shi’ite
volunteers and militia forces after Grand Ayatollah Sistani called on
Iraqis to defend their country days after Islamic State seized control
of the northern city of Mosul last June.
They
have also provided troops. Several Kurdish officials said that when
Islamic State fighters pushed close to the Iraq-Iran border in late
summer, Iran dispatched artillery units to Iraq to fight them. Farid
Asarsad, a senior official from the semi-autonomous Iraqi region of
Kurdistan, said Iranian troops often work with Iraqi forces. In northern
Iraq, Kurdish peshmerga soldiers “dealt with the technical issues like
identifying targets in battle, but the launching of rockets and
artillery – the Iranians were the ones who did that.”
Kadhimi, the
senior Badr official, said Iranian advisers in Iraq have helped with
everything from tactics to providing paramilitary groups with drone and
signals capabilities, including electronic surveillance and radio
communications.
“The
U.S. stayed all these years with the Iraqi army and never taught them
to use drones or how to operate a very sophisticated communication
network, or how to intercept the enemy’s communication,” he said. “The
Hashid Shaabi, with the help of (Iranian) advisers, now knows how to
operate and manufacture drones.”
A MAGICAL FIGHTER
One
of the Shi’ite militia groups that best shows Iran’s influence in Iraq
is Saraya al-Khorasani. It was formed in 2013 in response to Khamenei’s
call to fight Sunni jihadists, initially in Syria and later Iraq.
The
group is responsible for the Baghdad billboards that feature Iranian
General Hamid Taghavi, a member of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.
Known to militia members as Abu Mariam, Taghavi was killed in northern
Iraq in December. He has become a hero for many of Iraq’s Shi’ite
fighters.
Taghavi
“was an expert at guerrilla war,” said Ali al-Yasiri, the commander of
Saraya al-Khorasani. “People looked at him as magical.”
In
a video posted online by the Khorasani group soon after Taghavi’s
death, the Iranian general squats on the battlefield, giving orders as
bullets snap overhead. Around him, young Iraqi fighters with AK-47s
press themselves tightly against the ground. The general wears rumpled
fatigues and has a calm, grandfatherly demeanor. Later in the video, he
rallies his fighters, encouraging them to run forward to attack
positions.
Within
two days of Mosul’s fall on June 10 last year, Taghavi, a member of
Iran’s minority Arab population, traveled to Iraq with members of Iran’s
regular military and the Revolutionary Guard. Soon, he was helping map
out a way to outflank Islamic State outside Balad, 50 miles (80 km)
north of Baghdad.
Taghavi’s
time with Saraya al-Khorasani proved a boon for the group. Its numbers
swelled from 1,500 to 3,000. It now boasts artillery, heavy machine
guns, and 23 military Humvees, many of them captured from Islamic State.
“Of course, they are good,” Yasiri said with a grin. “They are American made.”
In
November, Taghavi was back in Iraq for a Shi’ite militia offensive near
the Iranian border. Yasiri said Taghavi formulated a plan to “encircle
and besiege” Islamic State in the towns of Jalawala and Saadiya. After
success with that, he began to plot the next battle. Yasiri urged him to
be more cautious, but Taghavi was killed by a sniper in December.
At
Taghavi’s funeral, the head of Iran’s Supreme National Security
Council, Ali Shamkhani, eulogized the slain commander. He was, said
Shamkhani, one of those Iranians in Iraq “defending Samarra and giving
their blood so we don’t have to give our blood in Tehran.” Both
Soleimani and the Badr Organisation’s Amiri were among the mourners.
A NEW IRAQI SOUL
Saraya
al-Khorasani’s headquarters sit in eastern Baghdad, inside an exclusive
government complex that houses ministers and members of parliament.
Giant pictures of Taghavi and other slain al-Khorasani fighters hang
from the exterior walls of the group’s villa.
Commander
Yasiri walks with a cane after he was wounded in his left leg during a
battle in eastern Diyala in November. On his desk sits a small framed
drawing of Iran’s Khamenei.
He describes Saraya al-Khorasani, along with Badr and several other groups, as “the soul” of Iraq’s Hashid Shaabi committee.
Asarsad,
the senior Kurdish official, predicts Iraq’s Shi’ite militias will
evolve into a permanent force that resembles the Iranian Revolutionary
Guard. That sectarian force, he believes, will one day operate in tandem
with Iraq’s regular military.
That
could have big implications for the country’s future. Human rights
groups have accused the Shi’ite militias of displacing and killing
Sunnis in areas they liberate — a charge the paramilitary commanders
vigorously deny. The militias blame any excesses on locals and accuse
Sunni politicians of spreading rumors to sully the name of Hashid
Shaabi.
The
senior Shi’ite official critical of Saraya al-Khorasani said the
militia groups, which have the freedom to operate without directly
consulting the army or the prime minister, could yet undermine Iraq’s
stability. The official described Badr as by far the most powerful force
in the country, even stronger than Prime Minister Abadi.
Amiri, the Badr leader, rejected such claims. He said he presents his military plans directly to Abadi for approval.
His deputy Kadhimi was in no doubt, though, that the Hashid Shaabi was more powerful than the Iraqi military.
“A
Hashid Shaabi (soldier) sees his commander … or Haji Hadi Amiri or Haji
Mohandis or even Haji Qassem Soleimani in the battle, eating with them,
sitting with them on the ground, joking with them. This is why they are
ready to fight,” said Kadhimi. “This is why it is an invincible force.”
(Editing By Simon Robinson and Richard Woods)
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