In 2011 when protests started in Syria Iran came to the aid
of Bashar al-Assad’s government. It didn’t trust the armed forces so it helped
create paramilitary groups to break up the protests and then battle the rebels.
As the war intensified Iran brought in militias from Iraq, took over military
strategy, and sent in not only its own advisers and fighters, but also those
from Lebanon’s Hezbollah. Iran is following almost the exact same script in
Iraq today to counter the insurgency after it launched its summer offensive in
2014.
In both Syria and Iraq the Iranians came to rely upon
irregular forces because they did not trust the army and police. When Syrians
began demonstrating against the Assad government in 2011 there was a general feeling
in Damascus and Tehran that the military could not be trusted to put them down.
That was proven true when many soldiers would later desert and join the rebels.
In Iraq, the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) disintegrated in the face of the
insurgency when the summer offensive began in June 2014. Michael Knights of the
Washington Institute for Near East Policy estimated
that 60 of the Army’s 243 battalions were lost with all of their equipment in
northern Iraq after the fall of Mosul. A U.S. official told the New York Times
that five of Iraq’s 14 army divisions were combat ineffective. With neither the
Syrian nor Iraqi armed forces proving reliable Iran went to militias to fill
the void.
In Syria, Iran turned to Syrian and Iraqi militias to handle
security, while the latter were brought back to Iraq when the insurgency took
off there in 2014. The Assad government created the Shabiha, then the Popular Committees, which
would later become the National Defense Force (NDF) to deal with the protests
and then the rebels. Iran
advised
Syria on the creation of all three forces using the example of its own Basij.
The Basij were a paramilitary group created in Iran during the 1979 revolution
and were used to put down the Green Movement in 2009. Iran provided training
to all three forces not only in Syria, but in Iran as well. When the fighting
really took off in Syria Tehran also brought in its militia
allies
from Iraq. This included the League of the Righteous, Hezbollah Brigades, the
Badr Organization, and new groups like Abu al-Fadhal al-Abbas, and many others.
Eventually a Badr commander was appointed by Iran to coordinate all the Iraqi
militias with the Syrian and Iranian governments. This was no surprise as Badr
was created by Iran during the Iran-Iraq War and had the longest relationship with
Tehran of any of the pro-Iranian militias in Iraq. A similar policy was carried
out in Iraq. Those same militias that were fighting in Syria began mobilizing
for deployment within Iraq in January 2014 after Fallujah fell in Anbar. That
included creating new popular defense brigades and launching recruitment
campaigns. Many groups also brought back their fighters from Syria to face the
Iraqi insurgency, and eventually became integrated into regular Iraqi Security
Forces (ISF) units. This would only increase after June. Like in Syria, Badr has
seemingly taken control of militias and larger security policy in Iraq. Badr
head Hadi Ameri has led
operations in Salahaddin’s Amerli, Babil’s Jurf al-Sakhr and is currently in
command of re-taking the Baiji district in northern Salahaddin. Mohammed Ghaban
from Badr was also recently named the new
Interior Minister. This served several purposes. First, the militias proved
capable fighters against the Syrian rebels and Iraqi insurgency. Second, it
allowed Iran to increase its influence in both countries by not only asserting
its militia allies as major defenders of the government, but also becoming part
of the existing military structures in Syria and Iraq. Institutionalizing the
militias is a way to guarantee their longevity in both countries long after the
rebellions are put down.
Iran came to define much of the military strategy in both
Syria and Iraq. As soon as the protests started in Syria, Iran began sending in
advisers
to help the Assad government. This was directed by the head of the Iranian
Revolutionary Guards Corps - Quds Force (IRGC-QF) General Qasim Suleimani, and
assisted by IRGC-QF head of operations and training General Mohsen Chizari.
Both were named by the U.S. Treasury Department in May 2011 for their role in
suppressing the Syrian public. A retired IRGC general said that there were 60-70
Quds Force commanders in Syria at any given time. There were also several
thousand Iranian Basij militiamen deployed to the country. These men not only advised
the Shabiha, the National Defense Force, and the Syrian military, but carried
out combat
operations as well. Similarly in Iraq, in June
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said that Iran was ready to defend Iraq after
the fall of Mosul. Immediately afterward there were reports that 150-2,000 Quds
Force members were dispatched to Iraq. That force is said to be
several thousand strong now. They are deployed not only to central Iraq, but
are also with Kurdish
forces
in Diyala and Ninewa. Just like in Syria, General Suleimani has been put in
charge of Iraq. He’s said to have set up a control center at the Rasheed Air
Base in Baghdad, helped with the defense of Samara in June, Irbil in August,
the relief of Amerli in September, the clearing of Jurf al-Sakhr in Babil in
October, and the current
operation in Baiji, Salahaddin. This has all been highlighted in various
postings to social media with pictures of the general throughout Iraq. This is
part of an on-going propaganda campaign to let Iraqis and the international
community know that Iran is on the ground and leading the fight in Iraq. Iran
is not only providing assistance at the front to the ground troops in Syria and
Iraq, but is playing a large role in the formation of policy in Damascus and
Baghdad. This is again increasing Iran’s influence not only with the respective
governments, but at the street level as well as it is seen as the main
defenders of both countries.
To assist with its operations Iran brought in Lebanon’s
Hezbollah to both Syria and Iraq. Hezbollah provided another set of trainers
for the Syrian military and militias. Lebanese fighters have also taken part in
combat in Syria since 2012. After the fall of Mosul, Hezbollah leader Hassan
Nasrallah offered to send
fighters to Iraq. By July the Christian Science Monitor reported that there
were around 250 Hezbollah advisers in the country. That month a Hezbollah
commander died near Mosul as well showing that they were at the front.
Hezbollah advisers were also said to have been involved in the recent operation
in Jurf
al-Sakhr that successfully cleared the area in the middle of October. Iran
has often relied upon Hezbollah as a proxy force to assist with its foreign
policy. In Arab countries like Syria and Iraq it’s believed that they provide
better trainers as they share the same language and culture. In Syria they have
also provided snipers, intelligence gathering, etc. They may do the same in
Iraq as well if they are not already.
Iran has closely followed the same military policy in both
Syria and Iraq. As the security forces of Damascus and Baghdad were
questionable, Iran turned to militias to fight protesters, rebels and
insurgents. Iranian advisers and fighters, and Lebanon’s Hezbollah supported
these irregular forces. Tehran’s ultimate goals in both countries are generally
the same with one exception. In both nations it wants to defeat the insurgents.
It also wants to expand its influence, which it has greatly done. It not only
has advisers throughout the security forces and in government offices, but it
is shaping strategy and both Syria and Iraq have come to rely upon Iranian
funded militias for their defense. Tehran is being opportunistic as well as
thinking long term here. It is taking advantage of the situations as they
presented themselves in each country to assert themselves within the state. It
also hoping that this power remains far after the insurgencies in both
countries are put down. Finally in Iraq it has one additional concern, which is
to make sure that the country never
emerges as a rival again as it was during the Saddam period. The Iran-Iraq
War still looms large over Iran’s worldview, so even though it wants Iraq to
win its current war, it does not want it to emerge as a strong nation
afterward. That is the real story of Iran’s relationship with Iraq. While Iran
has become one of Iraq’s most important allies in its time of need, it has its
own agenda, which does not always suit Iraq’s interests.
SOURCES
Abdul-Zahra, Qassim and Salama, Vivian, “Iran general said
to mastermind Iraq ground war,” Associated Press, 11/5/14
Barzegar, Kayhan, “Iran’s Foreign Policy towards Iraq and
Syria,” Turkish Political Quarterly, Summer 2007
Bas News, “Iran Continues to Play Large Role in Fighting
Alongside Peshmerga,” 9/4/14
Dagher, Sam, “Syria’s Alawite Force Turned Tide for Assad,”
Wall Street Journal, 8/26/13
Dareini, Ali Akbar, “Iran General Helped Iraq’s Kurds Battle
IS Group,” Associated Press, 9/24/14
Faqie, Nuwar, “Iranian General Soleimani Heads to Tikrit and
Beiji Clashes,” Bas News, 10/28/14
Fassihi, Farnaz and Solomon, Jay, “Top Iranian Official
Acknowledges Syria Role,” Wall Street Journal, 9/16/12
Fulton, Will, Holliday, Joseph, and Wyer, Sam, “Iranian
Strategy In Syria,” American Enterprise Institute and Institute for the Study
of War, May 2013
George, Susannah, “Breaking Badr,” Foreign Policy, 11/6/14
Islam Memo, “Additional 1,500 Iranian troops to fight Daash
in Iraq,” 9/22/14
McGeough, Paul, “Iraqi militias explain why they fight ISIL:
it’s not to please West,” Sydney Morning Herald, 10/21/14
Muhammed, Shorsh, “Talabani Adviser: Iranian Special Forces
Present in Iraq,” Bas News, 10/25/14
Naame Shaam, “Iran in Syria From an Ally of the Regime to an
Occupying Force,” September 2014
- “Iranian general admits ‘advising’ Syrian regime on
establishing ‘shabbiha’ paramilitary force,” 4/3/14
Reuters, “Insight: Battered by war, Syrian army creates its
own replacement,” 4/21/13
Rubin, Alissa and Gordon, Michael,
“Iraq’s Military Seen as Unlikely to Turn the Tide,” New York Times, 6/22/14
Al-Salhy, Suadad, “Iraqi Shi’ite militants fight for Syria’s
Assad,” Reuters, 10/16/12
Saul, Jonathan and Hafezi, Parisa, “Iran boosts military
support in Syria to bolster Assad,” Reuters, 2/21/14
Smyth, Phillip, “Hizballah Cavalcade: The Badr
Organization’s Syrian Expeditionary Force: Quwet al-Shahid Muhammed Baqir
al-Sadr,” Jihadology, 10/18/13
4 comments:
There is no Iraq any more. People have voted with their guns. Kurdistan, Shia Iraq and Sunni Iraq are the future. This may suit Iran, but it is a done deal by now. Even if and when Sunni Iraq recovers as a more "normal" country (which may take longer than expected; Allah has not guaranteed that all problems will end have a happy ending; they may become Somalia for decades) it will not submit to Shia-dominated federal Iraq. That ship has sailed.
I think the opposite. All the talk of Sunni autonomy from local authorities has died as they have come to Baghdad begging for assistance. Anbar is a perfect example which was the center of the Sunni protests is now complaining about how Baghdad has ignored their please for weapons, training, air strikes, etc. Ninewa Governor Nujafi who was also pushing the issue of autonomy just got kicked out of his party. There are few voices left advocating this point.
I am speaking without ANY local knowledge, so common sense would dictate that I defer to you. But I don't see how a federal Iraqi government will establish monopoly of force over Sunni Iraq given the current (and expected near-future) status of Shia-Sunni mistrust. Sunnis who dont like living in Somalia will come to Shia-owned Iraq and live the best they can. The rest will blow stuff up and get blown up in return. Once any modern Islamic state falls apart (meaning the Western or Russian colonial state falls apart for whatever reason), the next common denominator is Islam. And that denominator is currently in a very parlous state. The mainstream is confused, the "radicals" have theology on their side and have the more attractive arguments. I really doubt it can end well...
That's the reason why PM Abadi is pushing the National Guard idea. It will allow local forces to be formed and be put under control of the governors. This will allow the raising of Sunnis forces to control Sunni areas instead of having them garrisoned by Shiite forces.
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