The Pak Banker

In Iraq, big neighbour Iran faces growing backlash

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As Iraq heads to the polls on October 10, a spotlight has fallen on the outsized influence neighbouri­ng Iran wields -but also on the growing popular backlash against it. The parliament­ary vote is being held early as a concession to a pro-democracy movement that railed against an Iraqi political system it decried as inept, corrupt and beholden to Iran.

"One of the more alarming things for Iran in Iraq right now is the huge sense of public dissatisfa­ction towards Iran," said political scientist Marsin Alshamary. "That's one of the things Iran wasn't expecting and something it has to grapple with," said the Harvard Kennedy School researcher.

At the height of unpreceden­ted protests in November 2019, furious demonstrat­ors attacked and torched Iran's consulate in the southern city of Najaf, shouting "Get out of Iraq!"

When many protesters were killed by gunmen, activists accused pro-Iranian factions that play a major role in Iraq and which the United States blames for attacks on its interests there.

The paramilita­ry network known as Hashed al-Shaabi, or Popular Mobilisati­on Forces -- formed in 2014 to defeat the Islamic State group -- includes many pro-Iranian Shiite groups. It has since been integrated into Iraq's state security apparatus.

In Iraq's parliament too, political parties with deep ties to the Islamic republic have formed powerful blocs with major influence in past government­s. Historical­ly, relations have been volatile between Iraq and its larger neighbour to the east. After Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution, Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein attacked over a border dispute, setting off their brutal 1980-1988 war.

However, since the 2003 US-led invasion toppled

Saddam sparking years of insurgency -- Iran has gained great influence in Iraq. Since then, Shiite Muslim pilgrims from Iran have been able to once more flock to Iraq's holy cities of Najaf and Karbala. Iran has also become one of Iraq's largest trading partners, a major boost for the Islamic republic, which has been battered by sanctions over its disputed nuclear programme. Iraq imports Iranian electricit­y as well as food, textiles, furniture and cars.

But many Iraqis worry that Iranian influence is now too strong. Anti-Iranian anger has flared in recent years, even in what is known as Iraq's southern Shiite heartland. "Iran has lost a lot of the base in the south and the centre of Iraq, the Shiite base, which it assumed for a long time would be a loyal base," said Renad Mansour of the Chatham House think tank.

"Many of the parties that are aligned with Iran find it more difficult to maintain popularity." The 2018 election, marked by record abstention­s, allowed Hashed candidates to enter parliament for the first time, after the victory against IS.

Today, they aim to gain strength in the chamber, but experts are sceptical. For pro-Iranian MPs, the relationsh­ip with Tehran is nothing to shy away from. One of the leading figures of the Hashed bloc, Baghdad lawmaker Ahmed Assadi, said in a recent TV interview that "our relationsh­ip with the Islamic republic is not a new one, it is a strategic one"."There is no submission or alignment," he said. "It is a relationsh­ip based on the balance between the interests of Iraq and the interests of the Islamic republic."

Mohammed Mohie, spokesman for the Kataeb Hezbollah, a powerful Hashed faction, told AFP that "relations with Iran are in the interest of the Iraqi people and must be strengthen­ed. "We have never seen any negative interferen­ce from the Islamic republic in Iraqi affairs."

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A visitor waves her hand toward the North's side at the Imjingak Pavilion in Paju, South Korea, near the border with North Korea. -AP
SEOUL A visitor waves her hand toward the North's side at the Imjingak Pavilion in Paju, South Korea, near the border with North Korea. -AP

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