Sadr Eyes Taking Down Iranian Financial Cartel Operating in Iraq

Moqtada al-Sadr, Asharq Al-Awsat
Moqtada al-Sadr, Asharq Al-Awsat
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Sadr Eyes Taking Down Iranian Financial Cartel Operating in Iraq

Moqtada al-Sadr, Asharq Al-Awsat
Moqtada al-Sadr, Asharq Al-Awsat

In Baghdad, advertisement is rife for private banks safeguarded by concrete walls and security detail. But it is hard to find a single customer using these banks for any financial transactions. These newly formed institutions hide part of a complex financial “cartel” for smuggling and money laundering.

On February 17, Moqtada al-Sadr, an influential Shia scholar who leads the Sadrist Movement in Iraq, called for holding shady banks accountable for their involvement in currency smuggling and bill fraud.

It is difficult to be sure whether Sadr’s demands will be sufficient for dismantling one of the largest cohesive groups for financial manipulation in the region, especially since political parties and armed factions back it.

Nevertheless, Sadr’s move was a reminder to opponents that he does not receive political blows from opponents of the majority coalition without a response.

Little information is available about the nature of this cartel, who’s backing it and how it operates to achieve profits estimated at millions of dollars from smuggling and counterfeiting operations.

However, reliable sources say that this type of operation has escalated and taken an organized form after Washington imposed sanctions on Iran.

The lack of documented information against this cartel can be traced to fears of being assassinated for revealing the group’s secrets.

But scattered pieces of information, which were leaked over the past four years, show an initial picture of how this cartel operates and its association with local political and armed groups and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.

In the past years, Iraqi militias have established fake banks and companies that buy dollars from the official currency market with forged invoices and correspondences.

As sources of information intersect, it is estimated that more than $500 million are drained daily from the Iraqi market by these illicit financial operations.

These funds are linked to bank accounts established after the US sanctions in the capitals of Syria, Lebanon and Tehran, a senior official who requested anonymity told Asharq Al-Awsat.

Former Iraqi lawmakers note that the funds not only helped Iran ease the impact of US sanctions, but also financed strife in the region’s countries. They funded internal conflicts that erupted in the past five years.

The Iraqi government’s recent recommendation for international bodies to reduce the value of the Iraqi dinar has upset the Iranians because it will have to spend more local currency and hold different import transactions to obtain dollars from Iraq.



Gazans Struggle to Imagine Post-war Recovery

Palestinians search for survivors amid the rubble of a building, which collapsed after Israeli bombardment on a building adjacent to it, in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood in Gaza City on September 23, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and the Hamas group. (AFP)
Palestinians search for survivors amid the rubble of a building, which collapsed after Israeli bombardment on a building adjacent to it, in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood in Gaza City on September 23, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and the Hamas group. (AFP)
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Gazans Struggle to Imagine Post-war Recovery

Palestinians search for survivors amid the rubble of a building, which collapsed after Israeli bombardment on a building adjacent to it, in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood in Gaza City on September 23, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and the Hamas group. (AFP)
Palestinians search for survivors amid the rubble of a building, which collapsed after Israeli bombardment on a building adjacent to it, in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood in Gaza City on September 23, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and the Hamas group. (AFP)

The sheer scale of destruction from the deadliest war in Gaza's history has made the road to recovery difficult to imagine, especially for people who had already lost their homes during previous conflicts.

After an Israeli strike levelled his family home in Gaza City in 2014, 37-year-old Mohammed Abu Sharia made good on his pledge to return to the same plot within less than a year.

The process was not perfect: the grant they received paid for only two floors instead of the original four.

But they happily called it home until it came under aerial assault again last October, following Hamas's attack on southern Israel.

This time, the family could not flee in time and five people were killed, four of them children.

The rest remain displaced nearly a year later, scattered across Gaza and in neighboring Egypt.

"A person puts all his life's hard work into building a house, and suddenly it becomes a mirage," Abu Sharia told AFP.

"If the war stops, we will build again in the same place because we have nothing else."

With bombs still raining down on Gaza, many of the Palestinian territory's 2.4 million people will face the same challenge as Abu Sharia: how to summon the resources and energy necessary for another round of rebuilding.

"The pessimism is coming from bad experiences with reconstruction in the past, and the different scale of this current destruction," said Ghassan Khatib, a former planning minister.

That has not stopped people from trying to plan ahead.

Some focus on the immediate challenges of removing rubble and getting their children back in school after nearly a year of suspended classes.

Others dream of loftier projects: building a port, a Palestinian film industry, or even recruiting a globally competitive football team.

But with no ceasefire in sight, analysts say most long-term planning is premature.

"It's sort of like putting icing on a cake that's not yet fully baked," said Brian Katulis of the Middle East Institute in Washington.

It could take 80 years to rebuild some 79,000 destroyed homes, the United Nations special rapporteur on the right to housing said in May.

A UN report in July said workers could need 15 years just to clear the rubble.

The slow responses to past Gaza wars in 2008-9, 2012, 2014 and 2021 give little reason for confidence that rebounding from this one will be any smoother, said Omar Shaban, founder of the Gaza-based think tank PalThink for Strategic Studies.

The Israeli blockade of Gaza, imposed after Hamas took control of the territory in 2007, remains firmly in place, sharply restricting access to building materials.

"People are fed up," Shaban said.

"They lost their faith even before the war."

Despite the hopelessness, Shaban is among those putting forward more imaginative strategies for Gaza's postwar future.

Earlier this year he published an article suggesting initial reconstruction work could focus on 10 neighborhoods -– one inside and one outside refugee camps in each of Gaza's five governorates.

The idea would be to ensure the benefits of reconstruction are seen across the besieged territory, he told AFP.

"I want to create hope. People need to realize that their suffering is going to end" even if not right away, he said.

"Otherwise they will become radical."

Hope is also a major theme of Palestine Emerging, an initiative that has suggested building a port on an artificial island made of war debris, a technical university for reconstruction, and a Gaza-West Bank transportation corridor.

Other proposals have included launching a tourism campaign, building a Palestinian film industry, and recruiting a football squad.

"Maybe when you look on some of these, you would think they are, you know, dreams or something," Palestine Emerging executive director Shireen Shelleh said from her office in Ramallah in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

"However, I believe if you don't dream then you cannot achieve anything. So even if some people might find it ambitious or whatever, in my opinion that's a good thing."

Khatib, the former planning minister, said it was not the time for such proposals.

"I think people should be more realistic," he said.

"The urgent aspects are medicine, food, shelter, schools."