Tehran Loses Ground to Najaf’s Rising Influence in Baghdad

PMF fighters patrol northern Baghdad in archived photo – PMF Media
PMF fighters patrol northern Baghdad in archived photo – PMF Media
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Tehran Loses Ground to Najaf’s Rising Influence in Baghdad

PMF fighters patrol northern Baghdad in archived photo – PMF Media
PMF fighters patrol northern Baghdad in archived photo – PMF Media

Iran’s sway over Iraq’s Shiite political landscape is weakening as the Najaf religious establishment, led by Cleric Ali al-Sistani, asserts greater influence, challenging Tehran’s efforts to preserve its armed proxies and obstruct state-led reforms.

Despite pressure from Iran’s Revolutionary Guards to resist internal reforms – particularly those aimed at disarming rogue militias and integrating the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) into the state – sources close to the Shiite clergy say Najaf has grown increasingly alarmed by what it views as a political system on the brink of collapse.

Speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat since late July, political insiders described a “silent confrontation” between two competing visions for Iraq's Shiite community. One is backed by the pro-Iran Coordination Framework that dominates government.

The other is quietly advanced by Najaf, which sees urgent need for reform amid regional volatility.

“The system is facing its most serious test since 2003,” one religious source said. “It is losing its ability to sustain itself,” they added.

Hezbollah Brigades Threaten Government

Tensions flared in late July when Kataib Hezbollah, a powerful Iranian-backed militia, lashed out at Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, accusing him of provoking a confrontation with security forces.

The group released a video showing its field commander, Jamal Mahlel, warning the premier that his hopes for re-election were doomed.

“You will not have a second term,” Mahlel said, echoing threats once directed at former PM Haider al-Abadi.

The video, reportedly leaked by the group itself, followed a rare armed clash on July 27 between Kataib Hezbollah and Iraqi security forces over alleged land seizures near Baghdad. While details remain murky, the confrontation prompted the group to declare the end of its security operations in the capital’s southern belt – a symbolic retreat from areas long used as power bases by Iran-backed factions.

The fallout was significant. In a lengthy statement, militia spokesman Abu Ali al-Askari condemned the government’s actions, accusing the army of attacking “a group of youths” with heavily armed forces and armored vehicles.

“These areas were part of what was once called the Baghdad Belt,” said Askari, acknowledging a loss of ground. “A mistake was made, and the cost was high.”

Tehran Calls for Readiness, Sees Another War Looming

At the same time, Iranian officials warned allied factions to prepare for “imminent danger.” According to two militia sources, senior figures from the Revolutionary Guards – including Quds Force commander Esmail Qaani – urged Iraq’s groups to resist disarmament, describing it as a critical moment while Iran rebuilds its military capabilities.

One of the sources said Tehran’s message was unequivocal: “Every weapon will matter in the next war.” The same warning, he added, was also conveyed to Lebanon’s Hezbollah.

On July 29, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei declared that Iran would take “great strides in deepening religious faith and advancing scientific knowledge” – a statement widely interpreted as reaffirming Iran’s ideological commitment to regional influence, including its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

An internal document leaked from Kataib Hezbollah appeared to confirm preparations for “escalation – either internally or externally.” Analysts believe the leak was deliberate, part of a coordinated campaign to send a message to both Baghdad and Washington amid shifting geopolitical dynamics.

A senior Coordination Framework leader acknowledged that the US stance was becoming increasingly aggressive.

“Washington is playing brinkmanship,” he said. “This isn’t just about the factions anymore – the entire ruling coalition is under pressure.”

US Pushback on PMF Law Raises Stakes

Tensions rose sharply in late July after US Senator Marco Rubio warned that a proposed Iraqi law formalizing the PMF would entrench Iranian influence. During a call with Sudani, Rubio voiced concerns about legitimizing militias the US deems a threat.

Days later, acting US Ambassador Steven Fagin told deputy parliament speaker Mohsen Al-Mandalawi that the law would “empower terrorist groups.” On August 5, State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce described the legislation as a “hostile act” that could trigger harsh sanctions.

The Coordination Framework official admitted US pressure could become “suffocating,” especially as Washington appears to treat the Iraqi political system as a battlefield where some actors have become unacceptable.

Najaf Reemerges as a Counterweight

As Iran struggles with the fallout from its confrontation with Israel and a weakened proxy network post-October 7, the Najaf religious establishment has quietly regained influence in Baghdad. Sources close to the clerical leadership said Najaf views the current trajectory as dangerous for Iraq’s Shiites.

A senior cleric close to Sistani’s office said the religious leadership believes “the fate of Iraq’s Shiites should not be tied to rogue militias,” especially amid fears of renewed ISIS activity spilling over from Syria.

On July 17, Sistani’s representative, Abdul Mahdi al-Karbalai, appeared publicly for the first time in five years, calling for an end to militia activity and stronger state institutions.

According to officials familiar with behind-the-scenes discussions, a senior government figure met Karbalai shortly after the speech and was given a clear message: disarmament of militias and PMF integration must proceed in a way that respects fighters’ dignity and protects their livelihoods.

The message also included fiscal warnings – urging the government to curb chaotic spending and rethink Iraq’s foreign alignments to shield the country from external shocks.

From Soleimani to Sistani: Power Shifts in Baghdad

For years, key decisions in Baghdad were shaped by visits from Qasem Soleimani, the late Quds Force commander. But one Coordination Framework leader noted that the balance of power has shifted.

“Today, those kinds of strategic meetings are happening between Najaf and Baghdad – not Tehran,” he said.

He added that while Iran is desperate to retain its Iraqi foothold amid setbacks in its nuclear program, Najaf’s growing assertiveness is changing the rules of the game.

Sudani Under Pressure to Act

Caught between American opposition, Iranian expectations, and Najaf’s reform push, Sudani faces a narrowing path. His political survival may depend on how he handles the future of the PMF – a sensitive issue with no easy solutions.

Sources involved in high-level discussions say the US recognizes the risks of disbanding tens of thousands of fighters, many of whom were instrumental in the fight against ISIS. But Najaf insists that Iraq must not delay legal and institutional reform any longer.

“This is a historic responsibility,” one clerical source said. “If political leaders fail to act, the consequences will be severe.”

Analysts warn the PMF file has become a political time bomb ahead of elections. As Sudani weighs his next move, even his allies admit he must navigate a shifting regional landscape – or risk not just his office, but the future of Iraq’s post-2003 political order.



Egypt and Russia Discuss Developments in Sudan, Syria, Lebanon, Gaza

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Russian President Vladimir Putin during the launch of the installation of the pressure vessel for the first reactor at the El-Dabaa nuclear plant last month (Egyptian presidency)
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Russian President Vladimir Putin during the launch of the installation of the pressure vessel for the first reactor at the El-Dabaa nuclear plant last month (Egyptian presidency)
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Egypt and Russia Discuss Developments in Sudan, Syria, Lebanon, Gaza

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Russian President Vladimir Putin during the launch of the installation of the pressure vessel for the first reactor at the El-Dabaa nuclear plant last month (Egyptian presidency)
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Russian President Vladimir Putin during the launch of the installation of the pressure vessel for the first reactor at the El-Dabaa nuclear plant last month (Egyptian presidency)

Egypt and Russia discussed developments in Sudan, Syria, Lebanon and Gaza on Friday during a phone call between Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov, in the latest round of ongoing coordination and consultations between the two countries on bilateral ties and regional and international issues of mutual concern.

The Egyptian Foreign Ministry said the call covered the close relationship between Egypt and Russia, which it said has gained growing momentum across various areas of cooperation, particularly economic and trade fields.

Abdelatty expressed Egypt’s pride in the strategic partnership binding the two countries, describing it as the governing framework for bilateral cooperation across multiple sectors.

He stressed the need to continue joint work to advance ongoing projects, notably the Dabaa nuclear plant, in order to boost Russian investment in Egypt and expand cooperation between both sides.

Last month, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Russian President Vladimir Putin witnessed via video conference the installation of the pressure vessel for the first reactor unit at the nuclear plant, as well as the signing of the nuclear fuel procurement order.

Experts described the step as the first milestone toward nuclear energy production.

El-Dabaa plant is Egypt’s first nuclear power facility, located in the town of Dabaa in Marsa Matrouh governorate on the Mediterranean coast. Russia and Egypt signed a cooperation agreement in November 2015 to build the plant, with the contracts entering into force in December 2017.

Abdelatty underscored during Friday’s call the importance of implementing UN Security Council Resolution 2803 and moving ahead with the second phase of the US president’s peace plan for Gaza, noting the need to enable the international stabilization force to carry out its mandate and consolidate the ceasefire.

According to the Foreign Ministry, Abdelatty outlined Egypt’s efforts within the Quad mechanism to stop the conflict and preserve the unity and integrity of the Sudanese state. He also reiterated Egypt’s longstanding position supporting the unity, sovereignty, security and stability of Lebanon.

He renewed Cairo’s call for respecting the unity and sovereignty of Syrian territory and rejecting any actions or interventions that could undermine the country’s stability, urging the activation of a comprehensive political process that meets the aspirations of the Syrian people.

Egypt said in late November that it hoped to see the start of a political process in Sudan without exclusion and reaffirmed its respect for Sudanese sovereignty.

The Quad, which groups Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and the United States, has been working to secure a ceasefire in Sudan.

It held a ministerial meeting in Washington in September and stressed the need to exert every effort to resolve the conflict. In August, it proposed a roadmap calling for a three-month humanitarian truce, followed by a permanent ceasefire, paving the way for a political process and the formation of an independent civilian government within nine months.

The call also touched on developments related to Iran’s nuclear program.

Abdelatty stressed the importance of continued efforts to de-escalate tensions, build confidence and create conditions that offer a real opportunity for diplomatic solutions and the resumption of talks aimed at reaching a comprehensive agreement that accommodates the interests of all parties and contributes to regional security and stability.

Separately, Abdelatty and Lavrov discussed the war in Ukraine.

The Egyptian foreign minister reiterated Cairo’s consistent position that efforts must continue to pursue peaceful settlements to crises through dialogue and diplomatic means in a way that preserves security and stability.


Yemen Leader Warns against Unilateral Actions Undermining Unity, State Sovereignty

Yemeni armed forces flash the V-sign for victory as they ride in the back of a lorry as they celebrate the 58th anniversary of National Independence Day, in the port city of Aden, November 30, 2025. (Photo by Saleh Al-OBEIDI / AFP)
Yemeni armed forces flash the V-sign for victory as they ride in the back of a lorry as they celebrate the 58th anniversary of National Independence Day, in the port city of Aden, November 30, 2025. (Photo by Saleh Al-OBEIDI / AFP)
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Yemen Leader Warns against Unilateral Actions Undermining Unity, State Sovereignty

Yemeni armed forces flash the V-sign for victory as they ride in the back of a lorry as they celebrate the 58th anniversary of National Independence Day, in the port city of Aden, November 30, 2025. (Photo by Saleh Al-OBEIDI / AFP)
Yemeni armed forces flash the V-sign for victory as they ride in the back of a lorry as they celebrate the 58th anniversary of National Independence Day, in the port city of Aden, November 30, 2025. (Photo by Saleh Al-OBEIDI / AFP)

Yemeni Presidential Leadership Council chief Rashad al-Alimi warned on Friday that unilateral actions and internal disputes within government-controlled areas risk undermining state sovereignty and strengthening the Iran-backed Houthi group.

Al-Alimi made the remarks before leaving the interim capital Aden for Saudi Arabia, where he is set to hold high-level consultations with regional and international partners amid sensitive developments in eastern Yemen, particularly Hadramout.

He reaffirmed the government’s commitment to national partnership and collective responsibility to complete the transitional phase in line with the 2022 power-transfer declaration and the Riyadh Agreement.

“The state alone bears responsibility for protecting its national institutions and safeguarding citizens’ interests,” Al-Alimi said, warning against any measures that would challenge the government’s or local authorities’ exclusive powers, harm security and stability, deepen humanitarian suffering, or undermine economic recovery and international confidence.

The council chief said restoring state institutions, ending Houthi militia control, and pursuing economic reforms would remain top national priorities. He cautioned that any distraction by side conflicts “only serves the Iranian project and its destructive tools,” according to the state-run Saba news agency.

Al-Alimi praised Saudi Arabia for mediating the latest truce agreement in Hadramout and urged full adherence to its terms. He said the deal should serve as a foundation for stability in Hadramout and the wider region, describing the province as “a cornerstone of Yemen’s and the region’s stability.”

He voiced full support for local authorities and tribal leaders seeking to restore calm and enable Hadramout residents to manage their own local affairs in line with the PLC’s pledges and plan to normalize conditions in the province.

Al-Alimi also instructed the local authorities and relevant ministries to form a committee to investigate alleged human rights and humanitarian law violations and damages to public and private property in the province’s Wadi and desert districts, and to ensure victims receive redress.

The Yemeni leader urged all political and social groups to put aside differences, act responsibly, and unite in facing common challenges. He called for rallying behind the government to fulfill its obligations and place citizens’ welfare and dignity above all else.


Lebanon’s Leaders Unite on Technical, Security Track in Talks with Israel

Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri meets with UN Security Council Delegation in Beirut (Lebanese Parliament)
Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri meets with UN Security Council Delegation in Beirut (Lebanese Parliament)
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Lebanon’s Leaders Unite on Technical, Security Track in Talks with Israel

Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri meets with UN Security Council Delegation in Beirut (Lebanese Parliament)
Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri meets with UN Security Council Delegation in Beirut (Lebanese Parliament)

Cabinet sources said Lebanon’s three top leaders remain aligned as negotiations with Israel move into a new phase, marked by the appointment of a civilian envoy, former ambassador to Washington and lawyer Simon Karam, to lead Lebanon’s delegation to the Mechanism Committee.

The move is intended to jolt the committee out of months of stagnation and push it toward a security agreement anchored in enforcing a cessation of hostilities, after earlier rounds were dominated by routine tallies of Israeli violations conducted with United Nations peacekeepers.

The sources said the leaders’ agreement to pull the Mechanism out of its deadlock coincided with drawing political boundaries for the talks.

These boundaries are strictly limited to ending Israeli violations and attacks, securing a withdrawal from the south, releasing Lebanese detainees, and revisiting and correcting border demarcation in response to Lebanon’s reservations over disputed points along the Blue Line that it considers part of its sovereign territory.

The sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that Lebanon insists on restricting the negotiations to non-negotiable security issues. It will not allow the talks to drift into discussions on normalizing relations with Israel or striking a peace agreement.

This position is shared by President Joseph Aoun, Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, who was the first to propose adding civilians to the Mechanism.

The three leaders reiterated their stance ahead of the first round of talks, attended by US envoy Morgan Ortagus and joined by Karam, in defiance of the agenda set by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

They said Netanyahu is trying to raise the stakes to provoke Hezbollah against the state and sow confusion, even as the Israeli army continues its violations to turn the group’s base against it.

This became evident in the targeting of several homes between the banks of the Litani River, despite containing no weapons depots.

The sources said Netanyahu is escalating militarily to force Lebanon to accept Israeli terms, although he knows the negotiations will not deviate from their technical and security framework.

Lebanon, they said, remains committed to ensuring that only the state holds weapons.

The sources noted Berri’s insistence that he was the first to propose adding civilians to the Mechanism and asked where Hezbollah Secretary-General Sheikh Naim Qassem stands on this proposal.

They asked whether he ever objected to his “older brother’s” suggestion, given that Qassem had declared in an open letter to the three leaders that he rejects negotiations with Israel.

Qassem later walked back parts of that letter by having a senior Hezbollah official convey a message that Berri was not its intended target, in an effort to prevent a rupture within the Shiite political camp.

The sources also questioned why Hezbollah objects to the talks if its “older brother” is the one negotiating on its behalf and was behind the United States mediated ceasefire agreement brokered by Amos Hochstein.

They said the only card Hezbollah has left is raising the ceiling of its objections, since it no longer has the ability to reset the negotiating table at a time when the balance of power has tilted in Israel’s favor, particularly after the group’s unilateral support for Gaza cost it its previous deterrence and rules of engagement.

The sources said Hezbollah lacks alternatives that would allow it to reverse the balance of power and is limiting itself to loud political objections that it cannot translate into military action.

This comes despite its insistence on keeping its weapons and its accusation that the Salam government committed a mistake by agreeing to the principle that arms must be exclusively in the hands of the state, beginning from north of the Litani to Lebanon’s international border with Syria, in parallel with progress in the negotiations.

They said Hezbollah is forced to calibrate its position, since it cannot afford to break with Aoun or jeopardize its alliance with Berri, a rupture that would leave the group exposed at a moment when it seeks internal protection.

Any strain in these relationships would also create negative repercussions for the Shiite community. The sources asked why the group does not place its cards in Berri’s hands, as he is better positioned to navigate Shiite public sentiment that seeks the liberation of the south and the return of its residents to their villages.

Berri is viewed, even by rivals, as the essential gatekeeper to any settlement that could restore international attention to Lebanon and open a path for reconstruction. He enjoys Arab and international ties that Hezbollah lacks, as the group remains reliant solely on Iran.

The sources said the negotiations’ entry into a new phase prompted United States pressure on Israel to prevent the war from expanding, after Lebanon agreed to Washington’s request to add a civilian to the Mechanism and task him with leading the delegation.

They urged Hezbollah to stand behind the state’s diplomatic choice and said the group’s fears that the talks could lead to a peace treaty with Israel are unfounded.

They noted that Berri himself was the first to support bringing civilians into the process, which should reassure Hezbollah and encourage it to give diplomacy a chance.

They added that Salam is not acting unilaterally and is coordinating with Aoun. Both leaders are working together to implement the government’s commitment to ensuring that only the state holds weapons.

They also revealed that communication between Aoun and Berri has not stopped. The two men reviewed the atmosphere surrounding the Mechanism’s meeting in Naqoura before the latest cabinet session.

According to the sources, Berri instructed his parliamentary bloc and senior Amal Movement members not to comment on the negotiations, positively or negatively.

The directive came because he wants to centralize the political message and avoid dragging party members on both sides into disputes that could spill into the streets.

Hezbollah, they said, also wants to protect its relationship with its sole remaining ally in Lebanon after its former partners in the so-called Axis of Resistance endorsed the principle of exclusive state authority over weapons.

The sources said Hezbollah knows that avenues for repairing its Arab and international relations remain closed, unlike Berri who maintains wide ties.

They questioned what Hezbollah is counting on after its leadership rejected Egypt’s initiative, insisting, according to Western diplomatic sources cited by Asharq Al-Awsat, on linking its position to US-Iran negotiations in hopes of safeguarding Iran’s leverage in Lebanon after regional setbacks for the Axis.

They said the government will take note of Hezbollah’s objection, although it will have no impact on the course of the talks.

Hezbollah will not mobilize its supporters in the streets to avoid friction with Amal, particularly since Berri does not oppose the launch of negotiations, which remain tied to liberating the south and implementing Resolution 1701.

Any attempt by Hezbollah to outbid Berri for populist gain would backfire and weaken the group’s standing within its own community.