Iran Grows New Loyalist Iraqi Militias

Kataib Hezbollah members in iraq. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Kataib Hezbollah members in iraq. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Iran Grows New Loyalist Iraqi Militias

Kataib Hezbollah members in iraq. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Kataib Hezbollah members in iraq. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Iran has hand picked hundreds of trusted fighters from among the cadres of its most powerful militia allies in Iraq, forming smaller, elite and fiercely loyal factions in a shift away from relying on large groups with which it once exerted influence, reported Reuters in an exclusive report.

The new covert groups were trained last year in drone warfare, surveillance and online propaganda and answer directly to officers in Iran’s Quds Force, the arm of its Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) that controls its allied militia abroad.

They have been responsible for a series of increasingly sophisticated attacks against the United States and its allies, according to accounts by Iraqi security officials, militia commanders and Western diplomatic and military sources.

The tactic reflects Iran’s response to setbacks - above all the death of military mastermind and Quds Force chief Qassem Soleimani, who closely controlled Iraq’s Shiite militia until he was killed last year by a US drone missile strike.

His successor, Esmail Ghaani, was not as familiar with Iraq’s internal politics and never exerted the same influence over the militia as Soleimani.

Iraq's large pro-Iran militia were also forced to adopt a lower profile after a public backlash led to huge mass demonstrations against Iranian influence in late 2019. They were hit by divisions here after Soleimani's death and seen by Iran as becoming harder to control.

But the shift to relying on smaller groups also brings tactical advantages. They are less prone to infiltration and could prove more effective in deploying the latest techniques Iran has developed to strike its foes, such as armed drones.

“The new factions are linked directly to the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps,” an Iraqi security official said. “They take their orders from them, not from any Iraqi side.”

The account was confirmed by a second Iraqi security official, three commanders of larger, publicly active pro-Iranian militia groups, an Iraqi government official, a Western diplomat and a Western military source.

“The Iranians seem to have formed new groups of individuals chosen with great care to carry out attacks and maintain total secrecy,” one of the pro-Iran militia commanders said. “We don’t know who they are.”

The Iraqi security officials said at least 250 fighters had travelled to Lebanon over several months in 2020, where advisors from Iran’s IRGC and Lebanon’s Hezbollah militant group trained them to fly drones, fire rockets, plant bombs and publicize attacks on social media.

“The new groups work in secret and their leaders, who are unknown, answer directly to IRGC officers,” one of the Iraqi security officials said.

The Iraqi security officials and the Western sources said the new groups were behind attacks including against US-led forces at Iraq’s Ain al-Asad air base this month, Erbil International Airport in April and against Saudi Arabia in January, all using drones laden with explosives.

Those attacks caused no casualties but alarmed Western military officials for their sophistication.

General Kenneth McKenzie, head of US Central Command, said in April after the Erbil attack that Iran had made “significant achievements” from its investment in drones.

Last year, previously unknown groups began issuing claims of responsibility following rocket and roadside bomb attacks. Western officials and academic reports often dismissed these new groups as facades for Kataib Hezbollah or other familiar militia. But the Iraqi sources said they are genuinely separate and operate independently.

“Under (Soleimani’s successor) Ghaani, they’re trying to create groups with a few hundred men from here and there, meant to be loyal only to the Quds Force, a new generation,” the Iraqi government official said.

Iranian officials and representatives of the Iraqi government, the pro-Iran militia and the US military did not reply to requests for comment on the record. The US Department of State said it was not able to comment.

After Soleimani’s death, and with protesters turning against groups publicly linked to Iran, officials in Tehran became suspicious of some of the militia they had promoted and grew less supportive, according to the militia commanders.

“They (Iran) believed leaks from one of the groups helped cause Soleimani’s death, and they saw divisions over personal interests and power among them,” said one.

Another said: “Meetings and communications between us and the Iranians have reduced. We no longer have regular meetings and they’ve stopped inviting us to Iran.”

The Iraqi security officials, a government official and the three militia commanders all said the Quds Force began splitting trusted operatives away from the main factions within months after Soleimani’s death.

The shift from supporting mass movements to relying on smaller, more tightly controlled cadres reflects a strategy Iran has pursued before: at the height of the US occupation of Iraq in 2005-2007, Tehran created cells that proved particularly effective at deploying sophisticated bombs to pierce US armor.



Iran Presidential Candidates Accuse Each Other of Having No Plan

01 July 2024, Iran, Tehran: Iranian supporters of Pezeshkian gather to watch a live televised debate between Iran's 2024 presidential election candidates, Saeed Jalili, Iranian presidential ultraconservative candidate and top former nuclear negotiator, and Masoud Pezeshkian, Iranian presidential reformist candidate, at the central election headquarters for Pezeshkian in downtown Tehran. Photo: Rouzbeh Fouladi/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa
01 July 2024, Iran, Tehran: Iranian supporters of Pezeshkian gather to watch a live televised debate between Iran's 2024 presidential election candidates, Saeed Jalili, Iranian presidential ultraconservative candidate and top former nuclear negotiator, and Masoud Pezeshkian, Iranian presidential reformist candidate, at the central election headquarters for Pezeshkian in downtown Tehran. Photo: Rouzbeh Fouladi/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa
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Iran Presidential Candidates Accuse Each Other of Having No Plan

01 July 2024, Iran, Tehran: Iranian supporters of Pezeshkian gather to watch a live televised debate between Iran's 2024 presidential election candidates, Saeed Jalili, Iranian presidential ultraconservative candidate and top former nuclear negotiator, and Masoud Pezeshkian, Iranian presidential reformist candidate, at the central election headquarters for Pezeshkian in downtown Tehran. Photo: Rouzbeh Fouladi/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa
01 July 2024, Iran, Tehran: Iranian supporters of Pezeshkian gather to watch a live televised debate between Iran's 2024 presidential election candidates, Saeed Jalili, Iranian presidential ultraconservative candidate and top former nuclear negotiator, and Masoud Pezeshkian, Iranian presidential reformist candidate, at the central election headquarters for Pezeshkian in downtown Tehran. Photo: Rouzbeh Fouladi/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa

Iran’s presidential candidates on Monday accused each other of having no solution for the country’s problems ahead of Friday's runoff election.

During a more than two-hour debate on public TV, reformist candidate Masoud Pezeshkian attacked his competitor, Saeed Jalili, a hard-line former nuclear negotiator, for his lack of experience, saying: “Tell me, what single company have you ever managed to make you capable of running the country?

Jalili defended himself highlighting his career and several positions held, including that of top nuclear negotiator.

Pezeshkian further questioned his opponent on what plans he would have for reaching a nuclear deal, with Jalili responding he would approach it "based on strength not weakness,” without providing details.

Jalili accused Pezeshkian of having no plans for managing the country, saying his presidency would drive the country to a “backward position,” as it was under relatively moderate former President Hassan Rouhani (2013-2021). Rouhani struck a nuclear deal with world powers that capped Iran's uranium enrichment in return to lifting sanctions but later, in 2018, President Trump pulled the US out from the landmark deal abruptly restoring harsh sanctions on Iran.

Jalili said that “with the support of people,” Iran would achieve an economic growth of 8% a year, a promise Pezeshkian mocked, saying authorities should be allowed to “execute him if he failed” to deliver on it.

Iran must implement "a dynamic foreign policy” if it wants to have a successful economy, Jalili said, adding that it should not be limited to those nations that it has a problem with — a reference to the US and the western world. Instead, he said, "Iran should look to the other 200 nations in the world where “foreign relations should be improved."

Pezeshkian said his foreign policy will be based on “engagement with the world" including engaging in "negotiations for lifting sanctions.”

Pezeshkian and Jalili also said the low turnout in the first round — the lowest-ever poll turnout in Iran’s history — should be probed.

“It is not acceptable that some 60 percent (of voters) did not cast a ballot,” said Pezeshkian.

The candidates will have their second and last debate Tuesday.

The electiosn are aimed at choosing a successor for the late President Ebrahim Raisi, who died last month in a helicopter crash.