The Jerusalem Post

US publicatio­n alleges American role in ‘arming Iranian-backed militants in Iraq’

- • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN

A new report published online by The Washington Free Beacon claims there is “growing concern on Capitol Hill the US government is quietly working with militia fighters in Iraq who are directly tied to the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps.” The allegation comes as the war against Islamic State in Iraq winds down and Washington searches for a postISIS role in Iraq and Syria. It also appears as US President Donald Trump seeks to roll out a new policy to confront Iran in the region.

“Top lawmakers and others have begun to present evidence showing that the State Department continues to provide widespread support for Iranian-backed militias in Iraq, a program that first began under the Obama administra­tion,” the report by Adam Kredo, a senior writer on foreign policy and national security for the online news site, notes.

“We have seen reports that some US-origin military equipment is being operated by Iraqi militia units that are not the approved end-users,” a spokesman for the White House National Security Council told FreeBeacon.com. Representa­tive Ron DeSantis, a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee is quoted as saying Congress needs to get the facts about the State Department and its relationsh­ip with “these nefarious actors.” Kredo asserts that the government of Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi “is believed, in part, to allocate funds to these Iranian forces via Abu Mahdi al-Mohandes, a designated terrorist who leads Kata’ib Hezbollah.”

The complex problem that US policy faces in Iraq goes back to the 2010 Iraqi elections, when then-president Obama supported Dawa Party leader Nouri al-Maliki to become prime minister of Iraq. The Dawa Party was a pro-Iranian Shi’a sectarian group, but Washington was withdrawin­g from Iraq that year and thought the party would provide stability. Instead, it inflamed tensions and led to ISIS taking over a third of the country in 2014.

The US returned to Iraq that year to fight ISIS and agreed to do it “by, with and through,” its partner in the Iraqi government. That meant advising, training and equipping the Iraqis – not leading the fight. At the same time, pro-Iranian Shi’a militias raised to fight ISIS by men like al-Muhandis were fighting alongside Iraqi forces. In 2016, these militias, often called the Popular Mobilizati­on Units, became an official force of the Iraqi government. This has put the US in a bind: how to fight ISIS with the Iraqi Army but keep the militias – some of which are seen as terrorist groups that have previously targeted US forces – at arm’s length?

Kredo points to US Special Presidenti­al Envoy for the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS Brett McGurk, who served in the same capacity under Obama, as the main driver of current US policy in Iraq. McGurk.

“They [the Trump administra­tion] inherited a situation. They have a lot of things on their plate, but if you don’t nip it in the quickly it will grow. This is about Iran’s presence in the region, in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and it affects Israel,” Kredo says. He argues that it is also tied to former Obama-era officials in the State Department who want to preserve the legacy of the Iran deal. US human-rights law prohibits providing military assistance to foreign militaries that violate human rights under a law called the Leahy amendment. “I’ve asked the State Department to explain if they have heard of violations [of the amendment] and I can’t get an answer.”

There is a growing appetite in Congress to look into these allegation­s. Part of the impetus came from a November 2 press conference in Washington in which four US Congressme­n blasted US policy in Iraq. According to a Kurdistan2­4 report by Laurie Mylroie, US Representa­tive Duncan Hunter brought a poster to the press conference of an M-1 Abrams tank with a Shi’a militia flag on it, along with other images. “Here’s the IRGC commander Qassim Soleimani with the militias that we’re equipping, training and sending into combat.” Representa­tives Ron DeSantis, Lee Zeldin and Trent Franks were also present.

Jonathan Schanzer, senior vice-president for research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s, says that as Washington has become more aware of the challenge of the IRGC’s support for Hezbollah, it should apply that concern across the region. “Using that logic, the US should be equally alarmed and mobilized against the PMUs. They are mini-Hezbollahs. My sense is that we are at the beginning of the curve here. Washington requires an education process about the PMUs and the dangers they pose.”

Schanzer says that after ISIS, the next challenge will focus on combating these kind of Iranian proxies across the region.

An inquiry to the US-led coalition – about what kind of vetting goes into ensuring Shi’a militias are not pretending to be regular Iraqi Army soldiers in order to receive training – was not answered by press time.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? VEHICLES OF THE Shi’ite Popular Mobilizati­on Forces move through Al-Qaim after recapturin­g the Iraqi city on November 3.
(Reuters) VEHICLES OF THE Shi’ite Popular Mobilizati­on Forces move through Al-Qaim after recapturin­g the Iraqi city on November 3.

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