April 23, 2015
After
the recent Tikrit offensive, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi is
turning his focus to Anbar, where only limited areas of the expansive
western province remain under government control. Yet while the fight
against the Islamic State (IS) continues, there is another vital
struggle going on inside Iraq over the Iraqi state itself. This
battle pits Abadi and aligned nationalist Shia factions against a
series of Iran-backed militias and their political wings, whose power
expanded dramatically following the June 2014 collapse of the Iraqi army
in the north.
Although
the Tikrit offensive appears to have been an Iranian initiative, Abadi
deftly managed to make the Iraqi state a central player. Initially, the
bulk of the media attention was on the presence of Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps’ (IRGC) Qods Force Commander Qasem Soleimani in Salahuddin,
and reports of Iranian-backed militias closing in on Tikrit, Saddam
Hussein’s hometown. The key
groups included Asaib Ahl Al-Haq (AAH), which splintered from the
nationalist Islamist Sadrist movement in 2004 and became Iran’s proxy
during the previous civil war; the Badr Organization, which was
founded in Iran in 1982 and whose long-time leader, Hadi Al-Ameri, is
viewed as the political godfather of the Popular Mobilization Forces, or
Hashd (Al-hashd Al-Shaabi); and the Hezbollah Brigades, a smaller group
with a reputation for quality operations, headed by a man known as Abu
Mahdi Al-Muhandis, the Hashd’s military commander and a Soleimani
confidant.
As
the militia-led advance into Tikrit stalled in mid-March, Abadi had the
chance to invite the U.S.-led coalition to take part, targeting IS’s
most well-defended positions within the city. This required the militias
to pull back—not only because the United States demanded this, but
because the militias could not allow themselves to cooperate with U.S.
forces. Then Abadi ordered government forces forward, led by “Golden
Division” special forces personnel. Abadi’s well-choreographed walk on
April 1 down central Tikrit, with Salahuddin Governor Raed Al-Jubouri,
reinforced the impression of the government in the lead.
Abadi’s strongest move to bring the Hashd to heel was an April 7 cabinet vote that
formally put them under his authority as commander-in-chief, as Iraq’s
constitution dictates. This authority is reinforced by the power of the
purse, as only the cabinet can appropriate budget money for salaries for
Hashd personnel. It may also be reinforced by legislation, as the
proposed “National Guard”
law, which would give legal structure to the Hashd and create locally
recruited units in Sunni provinces, places authority in the hands of the
prime minister. However, that bill is tied up in parliament, and at
present the Hashd’s only legal standing comes from the budget
authorization; there is no statute regulating its structure,
chain-of-command, and such.
Abadi’s
challenge in reasserting the authority of the state is easier to
understand with a look back at the Shia militias’ rise. Their growth
prior to June 2014 may be divided into three periods. The first was
pre-2003, when Iran supported a series of Islamist factions as part of
its war with Baathist Iraq. All of them, directly or indirectly, were
splinters from the Dawa Party, the mother party of all Shia Islamists,
which was founded in 1958 and has held the premiership in Iraq since
2005. The most powerful was the Badr Brigade, the armed wing of what is
now called the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI). While ISCI was an
Iranian tool during this period, some factions, like Dawa itself,
maintained some independence from Iran.
The second period of militia growth was post-2003. The
key militia that challenged Badr was the Mahdi Army, the armed wing of
the Sadrist movement. The Sadrists arose out of a movement created by
Muhammad Sadiq Al-Sadr, whose son, Muqtada Al-Sadr, became a symbol of
the movement. During the 2005-2006 civil war, both Badrists and
Sadrists fought Sunni militants, while death squads killed thousands of
Sunni civilians. Crucially, ISCI/Badr’s advantage in military power and
organization allowed them disproportionate share in elections, and many
Badr militiamen infiltrated the security services. The Sadrists were
more associated with criminality, and the resulting backlash allowed
Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki to make a name for himself as a
nationalist by going to war against them in 2008.
The
third militia period began in 2010 and revolved around the
parliamentary elections. Although Maliki’s State of Law Coalition (SLC)
won a majority in Shia areas, the secular, mostly-Sunni Iraqiya
coalition won a narrow plurality. Maliki turned to Iran for help, and in
retrospect this was the beginning of an alliance between Maliki and
Iran. Although the United States and Iran supported Maliki, only Iran
used his reelection to form an enduring alliance.
While
Maliki would come to sponsor multiple militias, two connections were
notable. One was a new alliance with Ameri’s Badr. Ameri threw his seats
behind Maliki in 2010, formally split with ISCI in 2011, and then
joined Maliki’s coalition for the 2013 provincial elections. More
telling was Maliki’s sponsorship of AAH, a minor splinter from Sadr’s
movement that didn’t amount to much until Iran sponsored them. In 2010
they were still a small group, but they took on a visible presence in
Baghdad during Maliki’s second term (December 2010 to September 2014).
SLC parliamentarian Kamal Al-Saadi appears to have been Maliki’s
political liaison to the group; at a June 2012 AAH military parade,
Saadi gave a speech warning that Maliki was the target of a conspiracy
that targeted all of Iraq. He attended a similar event with AAH in May
of the next year.
By
June 2014, when army divisions defending Mosul collapsed in the face of
the IS onslaught, Badr, AAH, and smaller Shia militia groups were
already well-established. During a moment of national despair, on June
13, three days after the fall of Mosul, Abd Al-Mahdi Al-Karbalai,
representative of Grand Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani, gave a sermon of
monumental importance. He declared in a fatwa that the fight against IS
is a jihad and called upon believers to volunteer for the security
services in sufficient numbers. However, his language (“citizens able …
are to volunteer for the security forces to achieve this holy aim”),
along with later clarifications, makes it clear Sistani was not giving
Shia a mandate to wage war against Sunnis in general, but rather to
support the state. Nonetheless, the fatwa gave cover for a militia surge
that led to a garrison state mentality and their dominance of Baghdad
and surrounding regions.
This
statement has been the subject of much controversy, in part because
Sistani had always been a restraining force against Shia vigilante
action against Sunnis and for national unity. The statement itself did
not single out Shia citizens, although the religious sermon that
immediately preceded it unusually contained comments on physical
preparation for war under the leadership of “the Imam the Mahdi,” giving
the call a more Shia flavor. (The Friday sermons typically come in
pairs, a religious sermon, then a political one.) And the popular
response, with volunteers streaming into militias, enhanced this sense.
It
was shortly after this that Maliki created the umbrella organization
for the militias, commonly referred to as Hashd, from Al-Hashd Al-Shaabi
(“Popular Mobilization”). Maliki offered volunteers
roughly $750 per month, including amounts for salary, hazard pay, and
food allowance, although few volunteers were paid for much of 2014. He
had no legal basis for doing so, aside from his constitutional office as
commander-in-chief.
The
command of the Hashd is the most controversial issue in the continuing
debate over the National Guard bill. Despite Sistani’s apparent intent
that Shia would enlist in the armed forces, the bulk have joined
irregular forces. The most prominent are Iran-aligned groups. This
includes Badr’s Ameri, the political godfather of the Hashd, and AAH. It
also includes Hezbollah Brigades commander Muhandis, a man infamous for
having a U.S. (and Kuwaiti) terrorist designation and whom Maliki took
as an advisor during his second term. Muhandis now appears to be the
Hashd’s military commander. Having played a shadowy role last fall, he
gave his first press conference as “deputy leader” of the Hashd on
December 31. National Security Advisor Falih Al-Fayyad, a subdued,
“grey-suit” Islamist tied to former Prime Minister (and current Foreign
Minister) Ibrahim al-Jaafari, is the Hashd’s nominal leader, but it is
unclear whether Fayyad has any real control.
Yet
despite the prominence of the pro-Iranian groups, there is another
collection of Shia volunteer forces that identify clearly with the Iraqi
state. They are tied either to Sistani’s organization in Karbala or
established Shia parties, mainly the Sadrists
and ISCI. Sadr’s primary militia, the “Peace Companies” (Sarayat
Al-Salam), is the successor to the Mahdi Army. The Sadrists have taken a
nationalist line, saying that
the Hashd organization should be abolished as soon as possible and
volunteers enlisted in units under the prime minister’s direct
authority. Their interest is clear: Sadrist candidates won thirty-four seats in last year’s parliamentary election, compared
to just a single seat won by AAH—yet AAH, due to joint support from
Iran and Maliki, has seen its power grow. ISCI has taken a more
ambiguous stance, but politically is closer to Abadi than Ameri.
Thus
the stage is set, with the key political struggle being between Abadi
and Ameri. Ameri’s party already has twenty-two seats in parliament, and
his allies are more powerful on the ground at present, having
experienced a surge in recent months due to their front-line role
fighting Sunni jihadis. Yet Abadi has the constitutional office, the
power of the purse, and can count on the support of Shia factions whose
interests lie in maintaining Iraq’s independent political system. So the
open question is whether, in the three years until Iraq’s next
election, that period end with someone like Abadi or Ameri in control.
This article is reprinted with permission from Sada. It can be accessed online at: http://carnegieendowment.org/sada/2015/04/23/rise-of-iraq-s-militia-state/i7pv
Kirk
H. Sowell is a political risk analyst based in Amman, Jordan and the
publisher of the biweekly newsletter Inside Iraqi Politics. On Twitter: @uticensisrisk.
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