Iraq Faces Delayed Showdown with Factions Rejecting State Arms Control

Members of Asaib Ahl al-Haq take part in a Quds Day march in Baghdad on July 1, 2016. (AP)
Members of Asaib Ahl al-Haq take part in a Quds Day march in Baghdad on July 1, 2016. (AP)
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Iraq Faces Delayed Showdown with Factions Rejecting State Arms Control

Members of Asaib Ahl al-Haq take part in a Quds Day march in Baghdad on July 1, 2016. (AP)
Members of Asaib Ahl al-Haq take part in a Quds Day march in Baghdad on July 1, 2016. (AP)

Observers in Baghdad say a long-delayed confrontation may be looming with factions that reject the principle of “placing arms under state control,” a move announced by political groups and welcomed by the Iraqi government and the United States.

The warnings come as reports suggest the US-backed government of Ali al-Zaidi could approve military appointments inside the Popular Mobilization Forces as part of a plan to restructure the powerful paramilitary body.

Within one week, the Sadrist movement, Asaib Ahl al-Haq, and Kataib Imam Ali announced they were breaking away from the Popular Mobilization Forces.

The factions had overseen about seven brigades inside the body, but their fighters no longer appear to take orders from political and party leaders.

On Wednesday, Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi agreed with delegations from Asaib Ahl al-Haq and Kataib Imam Ali to form a joint committee to implement measures to place arms under state control within the next two days.

In a statement, al-Zaidi said Iraq was undergoing an important transition after major gains in security, making the current phase one of construction, reconstruction and broad development.

Supreme Judicial Council President Faiq Zidan on Wednesday urged resistance factions to “join their brothers and lay down their arms.” He thanked Sadrist leader Muqtada al-Sadr, Asaib Ahl al-Haq Secretary General Qais al-Khazali and Kataib Imam Ali Secretary General Shibl al-Zaidi for backing state control over arms.

Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba, meanwhile, renewed its rejection of “disarmament” and its commitment to “resistance.” In a statement, the movement said: “al-Nujaba remains steadfast and has not, and will not, change its position on the sacred and disciplined weapon that exists to defend Iraq, its holy sites and its people.”

Its leader, Akram al-Kaabi, had accused Israel in a post on X of “inciting the US Embassy chargé d’affaires in Iraq to speak about the weapons of the resistance.” He said he regretted that “a small number of Iraqis have become mouthpieces for them,” and urged armed factions to “reject the very idea of discussing this matter.”

Many remain skeptical of what has become known as “placing arms under state control,” citing the absence of clear technical mechanisms for implementation and Iran’s silence over the weapons held by its proxies in Baghdad.

Kataib Hezbollah and Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba are the most prominent factions to have openly rejected “state control over arms” and affirmed their commitment to the “option of resistance.” An unknown faction calling itself Ashab Ahl al-Kahf has threatened to resume operations against Israel.

Support among Iraqi factions for “placing arms under state control” is accelerating, amid US satisfaction that Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi has secured a political mandate to “consolidate stability in the country.”

The Coordination Framework authorized al-Zaidi to take the decisions and measures needed to protect the country’s higher interests. It also backed “placing arms under state control and severing the Popular Mobilization Forces’ links to political and party frameworks.”

US Embassy chargé d’affaires Joshua Harris described the Coordination Framework’s mandate for al-Zaidi as a qualitative step toward consolidating independence and sovereignty for Iraq’s promising future, and affirmed Washington’s support for government measures to place arms under state control.

The confrontation

Political sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that political leaders and government officials are closely watching the groups resisting state control over arms under national understandings.

They said, “The door to confrontation will remain open, whether between the Iraqi government and the rebellious factions, or between Washington and Tehran, which has neither endorsed nor opposed the announcement by other factions of their intention to hand over their weapons.”

Tom Barrack, US President Donald Trump’s envoy to Iraq and Syria, had congratulated Iraqi Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi on the start of efforts to place arms under state control, calling the latest steps important progress toward consolidating stability and restoring sovereignty.

In a post on X, Barrack said the move represented the first building block of renewed Iraqi governance based on self-administration.

Barrack’s praise for the Shiite groups that decided to return all weapons to the Iraqi state was notable. He described their decision as an essential step toward strengthening order and stability and building state institutions.

The Iraqi government, by contrast, has so far limited itself to welcoming the positions of armed factions without disclosing its practical plan to place arms under state control. It remains unclear which government body would receive the weapons.

Security observers say Washington is focused on removing strategic weapons such as suicide drones, cruise missiles and anti-armor launchers. No accurate data is available on how many such weapons the factions hold.

Security reports indicate that part of the plan involves “reorganizing and restructuring the Popular Mobilization Forces through some changes in the current leadership and involving military commanders with experience in managing the infrastructure of the body’s fighters.”

The struggle for influence

Observers are tracking shifts in the “struggle for influence” between Washington and Tehran in Iraq.

Ihsan al-Shammari, head of the Political Thinking Center, told Asharq Al-Awsat that “the United States will no longer need to share influence with Tehran in Iraq after the new balance of power in the region.”

On the factions loyal to Iran, al-Shammari said “the announcement by four or five factions that they will hand over their weapons” was not enough to convince Washington that the complex file had been closed, especially as Kataib Hezbollah, Kataib Sayyid al-Shuhada and al-Nujaba “possess the most dangerous arsenal and still refuse to hand it over.”

Al-Shammari said, “The US decision is that Iraq should be free of weapons in the hands of Iran’s allies, and that their system should be dismantled at all military, political and economic levels.”

Researcher Abbas Abboud Salem said the process of placing arms under state control would, in practice, distinguish between groups engaged in political life through parliamentary representation and government work, and those ideologically and politically tied to Iran.

He said the latter “see their existence and the continuation of their weapons as part of a regional function of confrontation with the United States.”

The disarmament plan

Asharq Al-Awsat reported on May 9, 2026, that an Iraqi committee, including Prime Minister-designate Ali al-Zaidi, was working to complete an “executive project” to disarm armed factions before presenting it to Washington, amid mounting US pressure to keep militias away from the new government and state institutions.

The committee had presented militia leaders with “ideas on how to disarm,” but some meetings “did not pass calmly,” according to informed sources.

The plan includes removing heavy and medium weapons and restructuring the Popular Mobilization Forces, alongside expected changes to sensitive security agencies, including the intelligence service.

But political sources questioned the government’s ability to implement the project, saying it may be aimed at “buying time.” Prominent factions, including Kataib Hezbollah and al-Nujaba, have said they will not hand over their weapons “whatever the cost.”



Houthis Link Educational Support to Loyalty and Affiliation

School supplies distributed to the children of Houthi fighters killed in combat, excluding other poor families, in Sanaa. (X)
School supplies distributed to the children of Houthi fighters killed in combat, excluding other poor families, in Sanaa. (X)
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Houthis Link Educational Support to Loyalty and Affiliation

School supplies distributed to the children of Houthi fighters killed in combat, excluding other poor families, in Sanaa. (X)
School supplies distributed to the children of Houthi fighters killed in combat, excluding other poor families, in Sanaa. (X)

The education system in areas under Houthi control is facing a fresh wave of criticism as the group launched the new academic year during the summer. The Houthis are accused of limiting the distribution of school supplies and cash assistance to their supporters and to the families of fighters killed or missing on the front lines, while also requiring private schools to grant tuition exemptions to the same groups.

The developments come as debate continues over the secondary school examination results announced by the Houthi authorities, with education experts questioning the unusually high pass rates and raising concerns about the impact of these policies on educational equity and the future of education in Yemen.

The controversy unfolds as millions of Yemeni families continue to face worsening economic conditions, leaving many unable to afford even the most basic educational expenses, including tuition fees, school bags, textbooks, and uniforms, amid declining purchasing power and widening poverty caused by the war and the economic crisis.

According to education sources, the Houthi-run so-called Zakat Authority oversaw the distribution of school bags and cash assistance through supervisors affiliated with the group. The sources said the mechanism prioritized the families of Houthi fighters and supporters, while excluding thousands of impoverished families unable to provide basic school supplies for their children.

The distribution process sparked widespread frustration among parents and education advocates, who argued that educational assistance should be allocated according to humanitarian need rather than political considerations or organizational affiliation.

Inequality

"Ibrahim," a parent in the Houthi-held Yemeni capital, Sanaa, told Asharq Al-Awsat that none of his three children received any educational support despite being registered on lists of families in need, while he witnessed school bags and uniforms being distributed to families linked to the group.

He said his family was living under severe financial hardship, yet their needs had been ignored. He argued that if charitable initiatives had supervised the distribution of the aid themselves, some of it would have reached his children.

Other parents in rural areas around Sanaa voiced similar complaints, saying the cost of preparing their children for the new school year had exceeded their financial means, while assistance remained limited to specific groups, deepening their sense of inequality.

Meanwhile, humanitarian sources said Houthi authorities responsible for aid operations and the Zakat Authority had recently confiscated quantities of school bags, notebooks, pens, uniforms, and cash that charitable initiatives had allocated to support poor students at the start of the academic year.

Education sources also said the Houthis had required private schools to waive tuition fees this year for the children of their supporters, as well as the families of fighters killed or captured on the front lines, without providing any compensation to the schools.

The principal of a private school on the outskirts of Sanaa, who requested anonymity, said the administration had no choice but to comply with the directives for fear of punitive measures. She noted that the exemptions did not extend to other students from the poorest families, despite their urgent need for assistance.

Education experts warned that imposing additional financial burdens on private schools without compensation threatens their financial stability and undermines their ability to continue providing educational services under the country's difficult economic conditions.

School supplies allocated by the Houthis for the children of their members. (Facebook)

Secondary School Results Raise Questions

Alongside the controversy over aid distribution, the secondary school examination results announced by the Houthi authorities have prompted widespread debate within education circles after reporting high pass rates and scores exceeding 99 percent for a number of students, despite years of decline in the education sector during the war.

The Education Ministry in the unrecognized Houthi administration announced an overall pass rate of 88.12 percent among more than 210,000 students who sat the examinations. Education specialists said the figure raises questions given the reality facing schools, which continue to suffer from teacher shortages, unpaid salaries, limited resources, and a decline in educational standards.

Education experts believe the conditions facing the education sector make it difficult to explain such a sharp increase in pass rates without releasing data detailing the grading and assessment process in a way that would strengthen confidence in the results and dispel the doubts surrounding them.

Several teachers also expressed surprise at the high scores, saying the level of academic achievement they observed throughout the school year did not correspond with the announced results, particularly in light of repeated student absences and disruptions to the education process.

Cheating Allegations

Yemeni education sources say the high pass rates recorded in Houthi-controlled areas do not reflect an improvement in educational standards. Instead, they attribute the results to widespread cases of organized cheating at some examination centers, along with the circulation of answer keys before and during the exams, which they consider a primary factor behind the higher scores.

Education activists also accused the Houthis of failing around 25,000 male secondary school students this year, claiming the move was part of a policy aimed at pressuring students and encouraging them to join the group's ranks in exchange for better chances of passing. The Houthi authorities have not commented on the allegations.

Several teachers said they had documented irregularities at some examination centers, including weak oversight and allowing certain students to receive assistance while taking the exams. They said such practices undermine the credibility of the examination process and compromise the fairness of student assessment.

In one case, a student from Sanaa said he was surprised to receive a score of 72 percent despite missing most of the school year because he had to work to help support his family. He said he attended only the final examinations, prompting him to question how the results had been calculated.

Meanwhile, a number of high-achieving students expressed dissatisfaction with the announced results, calling for greater transparency in grading procedures and the publication of detailed marks to safeguard students' rights and strengthen confidence in the secondary school certificate.


Deadly Algeria Orphanage Fire Caused by Air Conditioner, Police Say

Rescuers and police officers work at the site of a fire at an orphanage near Algiers, Algeria, July 16, 2026. Algerian Civil Protection/Handout via REUTERS
Rescuers and police officers work at the site of a fire at an orphanage near Algiers, Algeria, July 16, 2026. Algerian Civil Protection/Handout via REUTERS
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Deadly Algeria Orphanage Fire Caused by Air Conditioner, Police Say

Rescuers and police officers work at the site of a fire at an orphanage near Algiers, Algeria, July 16, 2026. Algerian Civil Protection/Handout via REUTERS
Rescuers and police officers work at the site of a fire at an orphanage near Algiers, Algeria, July 16, 2026. Algerian Civil Protection/Handout via REUTERS

Algerian police on Friday said a fire that killed 11 people at an orphanage in the capital was caused by an electrical spark from an air conditioning unit.

The blaze broke out before dawn on Thursday at the childcare facility in the Mohammadia suburb of Algiers.

A 52-year-old caregiver was among the dead, police said Friday, but it remains unclear how many children were killed.

Algeria's President Abdelmadjid Tebboune posted online Thursday that "several children" had died.

Nineteen others were injured during the fire, according to Algeria's civil defense.

Forensic experts determined that the blaze originated from an air conditioner that had been running continuously as Algeria endures a heatwave.

The civil defense has said nearly a thousand fires have broken out across the country's north during the past week, with the majority contained.

A municipal worker earlier died battling a fire in the northern province of Setif, according to a local mayor.

Every summer, northern Algeria is struck by forest fires, a phenomenon exacerbated by drought and climate change.

The fires have killed dozens of people in recent years and destroyed thousands of hectares of forest or farmland, along with numerous homes.


Germany Proposes EU Force to Replace UN Mission in Lebanon

15 July 2026, Finland, Helsinki: Johann Wadephul, German Minister of Foreign Affairs, speaks during a press conference following a meeting with his Finnish counterpart in the Finnish capital. (dpa)
15 July 2026, Finland, Helsinki: Johann Wadephul, German Minister of Foreign Affairs, speaks during a press conference following a meeting with his Finnish counterpart in the Finnish capital. (dpa)
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Germany Proposes EU Force to Replace UN Mission in Lebanon

15 July 2026, Finland, Helsinki: Johann Wadephul, German Minister of Foreign Affairs, speaks during a press conference following a meeting with his Finnish counterpart in the Finnish capital. (dpa)
15 July 2026, Finland, Helsinki: Johann Wadephul, German Minister of Foreign Affairs, speaks during a press conference following a meeting with his Finnish counterpart in the Finnish capital. (dpa)

German ‌Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul has proposed replacing the expiring United Nations peacekeeping mission in Lebanon with an EU-mandated force to prevent a security vacuum, he told the RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland.

"We should examine in the EU whether we can ensure that no security vacuum arises with ‌a European ‌mandate following the UNIFIL ‌mission," ⁠Wadephul said in ⁠an interview published on Friday.

The UN Interim Forces in Lebanon (UNIFIL) mission expires on December 31, 2026. Germany's parliament extended the country's participation in the mission for the final time just weeks ⁠ago.

Wadephul said Lebanon, with ‌a stabilizing ‌government, represented "one of the most hopeful developments ‌in the region at the moment."

Lebanon ‌and Israel held ambassador-level talks at the US embassy in Rome on Tuesday and Wednesday — their sixth ‌round of face-to-face negotiations since a new war erupted on ⁠March ⁠2 between Israel and Lebanese armed group Hezbollah, triggered by the wider regional conflict.

An EU-mandated force could "create the conditions for the Israeli army to withdraw without Hezbollah returning with its terror," the minister added.

The proposal comes as European nations seek to maintain regional stability while balancing relations with Israel and Lebanon.