The Badr Organization is the oldest of Iraq’s militias, and
is currently taking the lead in the fighting in the country. It was the
creation of the Iranian government during the Iran-Iraq War as the armed wing
of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI), and has kept up those ties with
Tehran since then. After the overthrow of Saddam, Badr attempted to seize
power, carried out assassinations of former regime members, and then started sectarian attacks upon Sunnis in retaliation for the insurgency. Eventually
it broke from ISCI, and became a major ally of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
It then went on to fight in Syria, only to return to Iraq to battle the
insurgency there. Badr represents the violent politics of Iraq’s recent
history.
Badr members undergoing military training in Iran. Tehran
was and is Badr’s main benefactor (Global
Security)
The Badr Organization emerged out of the Iran-Iraq War of
the 1980s. In 1983 the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) created Badr
as the armed wing of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI). (1) The two
forces fought
alongside each other during the war. Badr was made up of Iraqi exiles and captured
soldiers, some of which were forced
to join. Its origins with the Iranian government would lead to criticisms
when Badr and ISCI returned to Iraq after 2003 as they were labeled Iranian
puppets and were attacked for leaving the country during the Saddam period.
Badr was made up of Iraqi POWs and exiles (Iranian Historical Photograph)
In the 1990s, Badr continued its opposition to the Iraqi
regime. It moved
into Najaf, Karbala and Basra during the 1991 uprising following the Gulf War
as the Supreme Council attempted to appropriate the revolt. When the Iraqi army
rallied to put down the rebellion Badr retreated back into Iran, which caused
much resentment against the group. Tehran too was disappointed
in Badr’s performance and tried to change its emphasis from a conventional
armed force into a covert one. A special unit was created under the control of
the IRGC Quds Force to carry out secret operations within Iraq. From 1999-2001
it was responsible for several attacks, such as a May 2000
rocket barrage upon the presidential palace in Baghdad. Many of the networks
created to move men and material back and forth between Iran and Iraq have been
maintained until this day, and were used for example to smuggle
explosively formed projectiles (EFPs) to militias aligned with Iran during the
U.S. occupation.
When the U.S. invaded in 2003 Badr saw another opportunity
to return to Iraq. In February it deployed several thousand fighters to
Sulaymaniya where it was hosted by the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK). The
United States was concerned about this mobilization, and warned that Badr would
be attacked if it entered Iraq. That was ignored and in Mach
2003, Badr moved
into Diyala and Wasit with some 10,000 men. The U.S. tried to hold them in
place with Special Forces and peshmerga, but Badr went on to clash with
Baathists, Sunni tribes, and the Iranian dissident group Mujahadeen e-Khalq in
Diyala, while a Badr member declared himself mayor of Kut in Wasit. Washington
was concerned that Badr was working with Iran to seize Iraqi territory in the
post-war chaos. It therefore moved to try to block the group, but that failed.
The Supreme Council attempted to heal this riff as it
decided to work with the United States. In May,
Badr said that it was giving up its weapons. In September it changed its name
to the Badr Organization, and in October ISCI leader Abdul Aziz Hakim announced
that the militia was being turned into a civilian organization. Unlike other
Shiite religious parties such as the Dawa and the Sadrists, the Supreme Council
cooperated with the Americans as a way to ensure its place in post-invasion
Iraq. It made these moves with Badr to try to show that it was committed to a
peaceful transition in the country, but it was all for show as Badr remained
its armed wing.
In the years following the American invasion Badr was used
by ISCI to try to seize power when the opportunity presented itself. For
example, in February
2005 Badr attacked the headquarters of the Nasiriyah police, and installed
their own man as chief. In August,
militiamen deposed the mayor of Baghdad and replaced him with a Badr member.
Many political parties and their armed wings were taking similar actions after
the overthrow of Saddam. Despite the U.S. presence there was still a vacuum in
many areas waiting to be filled.
As Interior Minister in 2005 Bayan Jabr (far right) was responsible for
recruiting thousands of Badr fighters into the security forces (Time)
When the Jaafari government took office in 2005 the Supreme
Council was given the Interior Ministry. That was a coveted office, because the
police it controlled gave it a presence throughout the country to be used by
whatever party ran the ministry. In April 2005
Bayan Jabr was made Interior Minister after which he immediately began
recruiting members of the Badr Brigade into the security forces. Many of those
militiamen went into the commandos such as the Wolf, Volcano and Scorpion
Brigades. Those units and others under the militia were accused of a number of
abuses. In August,
the Volcano Brigade took away 36 Sunnis from Baghdad and tortured and killed
them before dumping their bodies. In November,
a U.S. military unit found a prison in Jadriya, Baghdad with 173 people in it,
many with signs of torture. The Secret Investigative Unit ran the facility
under the direct command of Minister Jabr. In February 2006,
18 police commandos were caught running a kidnapping ring. The commander of the
unit said that he was acting under orders from senior officials in Badr that
gave him names of people to abduct. Jabr was eventually pushed out of office in
May 2006 under U.S. pressure, and transferred to the Finance Ministry. It would
take years to purge and re-train the Badr elements that Jabr brought into the
ministry.
Besides its own agenda, Badr continued to work with the
Iranians to carry out a number of targeted killings throughout Iraq. In October 2004,
the head of Iraq’s national intelligence agency accused the militia of killing
ten of his men on orders from Tehran. The agency raided
three safe houses and claimed to have found documents linking Iranian agents to
Badr members who were carrying out the assassinations. At the time, the
intelligence service was staffed by former regime elements, and directed by the
CIA, which were both seen as threats by Iran. After the January 2005 elections,
there was a wave
of murders of former Baathists. There were reports that hit lists were
being circulated of party members to kill. Members of Saddam’s intelligence
agency and armed forces were also being targeted. For instance, there was a
wave of hits against former air
force pilots who were veterans of the
Iran-Iraq War. Most of these attacks were pinned on the Badr Brigade. In October
2005, the U.S. military reported that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard was directing
its militia allies including Badr to assassinate people in Basra. The militias
would have their members in the police carry out the shootings. Finally, in
March 2007, another U.S. military memo documented how Iranian intelligence was
working with Badr to attack members of the Industry Ministry as part of a media
campaign orchestrated by Tehran to undermine the Surge. Iran would often work
through militia allies to carry out its wishes in Iraq. One of its main targets
was Baathists and other members of the former regime, especially those involved
in the Iran-Iraq War. Iran had a long memory, and wanted to exact its revenge
against these people. Badr was one of their main partners in this assassination
campaign given its origins and continued links with Tehran. In return, August
2004 for instance, the Iraqi National Intelligence Service captured Iranian
Revolutionary Guard documents
showing that it was paying the salaries of up to 11,740 members of the Badr
Brigade. In November 2009, U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Christopher Hill in a
diplomatic memo noted that ISCI and Badr were receiving roughly $70 million a
year from Iran. (5)
The militia was not only involved in violence against
Saddam’s men, but its main rival as well the Sadrists. In October
2005, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki sent 2,300 soldiers and police
commandos to secure Amarah in Maysan after heavy fighting broke out there
between Badr and the Mahdi Army. The fighting would spread
to several other southern cities with 30 people killed and
another 160 wounded in the process. In the summer
of 2007 there were renewed clashes between the two groups in Diwaniya. That
would come to a head in another major battle in Karbala in August where 50
civilians died and roughly 200 were wounded. Moqtada al-Sadr declared a
cease-fire afterward, but the next month Badr
and the Mahdi Army were back at it once again this time in Maysan, Dhi Qar, and
Muthanna, and then back to Karbala in October.
When Maliki launched his Charge of the Knights campaign against the Sadr
movement in Basra, the Mahdi Army retaliated against Badr as well who were seen
as aligned with the prime minister. That led to fighting in Sadr City, a
rocket attack upon Badr’s offices in Amarah in March, (2) and then an attempted
assassination of a local Badr Brigade commander and imam in Baghdad’s Abu Dishr
in May that escalated into another gunfight. The Sadrists and Supreme Council
were deadly competitors for control of the Shiite polity. The Sadrists were one
of those groups that accused ISCI of being Iranian stooges and having abandoned
the country for the safety of Iran during the Saddam period. After 2003 the two
would take their rivalry into the streets and lead to these incidents and many
more.
The death of ISCI head Abdul Aziz Hakim and the ascension to
power of his son Ammar would eventually lead Badr to split from the Supreme
Council in 2012 (PBS)
By 2011 the relationship between ISCI and its militia were
wearing thin. After the death
of the party’s leader Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, his young son Ammar Hakim assumed
power in August 2009.
Hadi Ameri the head of Badr and others of the old guard opposed this move. By
November 2011 there were rumors that the two had split ways, and that was made
official in March
2012. Badr then became its own political party, and quickly moved into
Premier Maliki’s camp.
Badr and Maliki would form not only political, but military
ties as well as the militia would act as enforcers for the prime minister. In
December 2011 for instance, the premier was attempting to block Diyala’s move
to become a federal region. He sent Badr head Ameri, a Diyala native to talk
with local officials there, while his militiamen took to the streets in an act
of intimidation against the pro-federalists. (3) Ameri then announced
that Badr would run as part of Maliki’s State of Law list in the 2013
provincial and 2014 national elections. The party ended up winning
19 seats in parliament, roughly 20% of State of Law’s total. At this time, the
organization was trying to move away from just being an armed group to being a
political party. Its actions in Diyala however, showed that the group was still
willing to use force to make its point, and had not given up the gun. That was
quickly shown when the Syrian civil war started.
In 2012, Badr would mobilize its men to go fight in Syria.
In January, a party official called for an army made up of the Badr Brigade and
Mahdi Army to go defend the Syrian government. (4) He said that they were
needed to counter Sunni militants from taking power, which was part of a plot
orchestrated by Saudi Arabia to destabilize the Assad regime. By October
there were the earliest reports of its militiamen fighting in the country,
although it was officially denied at the time. A Shiite politician told Reuters
that Iran had appointed Badr to lead the Iraqi militias who were involved
there. That included groups such as Kataib Hezbollah who along with Badr formed
the Kataib
Sayid al-Shuhada militia in early 2013. In May
Badr started posting pictures of its fighters supporting the Abu Fadhl al-Abbas
Brigade in Syria, and in June a Badr militiaman died in the Damascus area. By July
the group was open about its commitment to Syria announcing that it had 1,500
fighters there on Facebook. Later that month, Badr began holding public
funerals for its losses suffered in the war, and announced a new militia Quwest
Shahid al-Sadr that would be deployed there. Hadi Ameri, who was then
Transportation Minister, facilitated
the flight of Iranians arms and equipment to Damascus through Iraqi air space. Badr
and other like minded parties felt that the Syrian rebels were mostly made up
of Islamists who were directly threatening Shiites. That was why it always
justified its presence in the country as defending the Sayid Zainab shrine in
the Damascus suburbs. At the same time, only those groups close to Iran sent
their men there, and that was after Tehran and its Quds Force put out the call
to its allies for help propping up the Assad regime. The IRGC-QF would direct
these militias, and had Badr coordinate its Iraqi brethren.
Badr head Ameri (foreground)
and IRGC-QF Commander Gen Suleimani (background)
during recent security operations in Iraq (via
Twitter)
When the insurgency began regenerating in Iraq, Badr would
return to protect the homeland. In July
2013 for instance, Hadi Ameri offered to have his men take over security after
the Islamic State carried out attacks upon the Taji and Abu Ghraib prisons. Two
months later, Badr repeated
the offer saying that it could help quell sectarian violence in the capital
and Diyala. In March
2014, Maliki met with his advisers and called for a new security force made up
of three militias including Badr, because he was upset with the performance of
the army and police. Then immediately after the fall of Mosul, the premier put
Ameri in charge
of Diyala. As part of this the militia would receive
arms and supplies from the government. Since then, Badr has been deployed to
all the major battlefronts in Iraq. In July it was fighting in
Anbar, and in August
it helped relieve the siege of Amerli, Salahaddin. It would then go on to take
part in the clearing of the Tuz
Kharmato district in eastern Salahaddin, Jurf al-Sakhr in Babil in October,
Jalawla and Sadiya in Diyala in November, and then
Dhuluiya in Salahaddin in December.
Hadi Ameri led many of these operations in conjunction with IRGC-Quds Force
commander General Qasim Suleimani. Along the way, Mohammed Ghaban of Badr was
named Interior Minister under the new
Haider Abadi government in September. Badr was able to gain such a
prominent position in the fighting for a number of reasons. First, its alliance
with Maliki made it a natural choice when the premier became upset with the ISF.
Second, after Mosul Iran stepped in as the main supporter of Baghdad, and put
militias it was friendly with in the lead because it too had no confidence in
the army and police. Finally, just as in Syria, Tehran would make Badr the head
of the irregular forces as the two had the longest relationship.
This would lead to a new round of sectarian attacks by the
militia. In June,
Badr shot up four cells in the Counterterrorism prison in Ninewa’s Tal Afar
killing 51 prisoners before the city fell. That same month Badr and Asaib Ahl
Al-Haw fighters shot 43 prisoners in Jumarkhe, Diyala. On October 14, a Badr
Commander in Sulaiman Bek, Salahaddin told Rudaw that it had the right to kill
any Sunni who fought alongside the Islamic State and take their property. This
extended to civilians as the organization was accused of going after them in Jurf
al-Sakhr and Sadiya
because they were believed to be IS supporters. That included looting and
destroying their homes. These were the same kinds of tactics Badr used when it
controlled the Interior Ministry in 2005, and continued to use during the
2005-2008 civil war. Then like now the civilian population were considered
legitimate targets along with the insurgents because the latter could not
operate without the former.
Badr’s history follows much of Iraq’s recent past. From
Iraq’s war against Iran to the 1991 uprising to the 2003 invasion and overthrow
of Saddam, the militia has been at the forefront of the conflict in the
country. It has always wanted power first as part of the Islamic Supreme
Council of Iraq and then as its own Badr Organization. It continues to play a
prominent role in the State of Law list and the current government. It also
maintains its close links with Iran, which has always been its main benefactor
since the group’s inception. That’s why Badr leaders such as Hadi Ameri have
recently praised Tehran for saving Iraq. At the same time, it has used force
more often then not to achieve its goals. In Iraq, those with power are often
those with the guns, and Badr is a perfect example of this period of Iraqi
history.
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3 comments:
Incredible piece of information.
- OIF vet
Joel, when the Badr elements inside the Ministry of Interior were going around killing people over the years, what did the US occupation forces do in response? I feel like I've been reading a lot about US forces opposing Sunni insurgents and Sadrist forces, but I never see anything about the US going after the Badr/Interior Ministry. Were there ever any clashes between the US and the Interior Ministry/Badr?
Also when the US went after Sadr, it kind of sounds like the US was doing the Badr/Interior Ministry's dirty work to an extent, is that an unfair way of looking at it?
I've seen a few interviews with Sunni senior politicians and others (such as from the Association of Muslim Scholars) where they praise Muqtada al-Sadr, so it seems like some Sunni leaders see Muqtada as greatly preferable over the Maliki/Badr types.. so it just makes me wonder if the US was shooting at the wrong people when they went after Muqtada
Charlie Six suggest you read my interview with Jerry Burke who was a U.S. adviser to the Interior Ministry during this time.
http://musingsoniraq.blogspot.com/2012/02/from-bad-to-worse-how-militias-moved.html
The U.S. was fully aware of Badr elements being brought into the Ministry in 06 and considered an "Iraqi matter." There were attempts to arrest some Badr police elements as well but they were stopped by higher ups. The U.S. did raid one or two of its secret facility such as Jadriya, but that appeared to be individual initiative by U.S. commander and not coming from above.
I think there was at least one case where Badr men tried to lead U.S. soldiers into an ambush but can't remember when or where off the top of my head.
As for the Sadr vs Badr issue, ISCI was cooperating with the U.S. and had been since before the 03 invasion, while Sadr was an active opponent and his militia were and its breakaway groups were carrying out lots of attacks upon the Americans, which was why they got all the focus. Plus during the Surge the U.S. was trying to stop the sectarian fighting and the Sadrists were a main player in that. Badr was too, but within the security forces and the U.S. thought it could deal with those elements & reform them rather than have to fight them like the Mahdi Army.
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