Arab News

Anti-terror commander’s removal angers Iraqis

US-Iran tug-of-war blamed for the removal

- Suadad Al-Salhy Baghdad

Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi’s sacking of the commander of the troops of the Counter Terrorism Squad (CTS) has angered Iraqis and increased their resentment against the government, local officials and analysts have told

Arab News.

Lt. Gen. Abdulwahab Al-Saadi was removed from his post and transferre­d to the Ministry of Defense without explanatio­n on Friday. Al-Saadi led liberation battles in Tikrit, Fallujah and Mosul after 2014 when Daesh militants seized most Sunni towns and cities in the western and northern parts of the country. He won the trust of the majority of Iraqis, especially Sunnis, who feared retaliatio­n by Iraqi security forces and pro-Iran paramilita­ry groups fighting alongside the Iraqi army for staying in areas ruled by Daesh.

Al-Saadi's command of the attack forces and the high discipline of his fighters and those under his command bridged the gap between the residents of those areas and the Iraqi forces and greatly reduced causalitie­s on both sides.

The treatment of Al-Saadi has ignited social networking sites in the past three days, turning them into an arena for criticizin­g Abdul Mahdi and his government. As activists sought to organize large demonstrat­ions to begin on Tuesday, hundreds of people from Mosul demanded the dedication of a statue of Al-Saadi that they had erected during the past months to express their love and gratitude to the soldier.

The reasons for Al-Saadi's punishment have not been publicly revealed, but Abdul Mahdi, without naming Saadi, said in a televised interview with local Iraqi stations broadcast on Sunday that “(there are) officers (who) go to embassies. This is unacceptab­le and unreasonab­le.” “The military establishm­ent cannot be left to personal whims, whether it is the commander's whims or any other figure.

“The officer does not choose his position, but (he) gets orders and executes them … Going to the meEnnahdha dia and social media is a big and unacceptab­le mistake,” he said, referring to Al-Saadi who expressed his rejection of the orders and publicly said that he preferred to die than be frozen out.

While the majority of Iraqis consider that the freezing out of AlSaadi is intended to destroy the symbolism of senior military officers who led the war against Daesh over the past years, politician­s and analysts believe that the removal of Al-Saadi from the CTS is part of the US-Iranian conflict in Iraq, aimed at tightening the grip on military and security institutio­ns.

“The CIA man in the Iraqi army overthrew the man of the frontlines and fighting against Daesh,” Azzat Al-Shabandar, a prominent Shiite politician, wrote on his Twitter account on Saturday.

“The defense minister has no powers, and the prime minister is a peaceful man and does not want to get into trouble,” Shabandar said. Iraq has been the biggest battlegrou­nd between Iran and the US since 2003. Both countries control dozens of armed factions and military and political leaders in Iraq who serve their agendas in the region.

The conflict between the two traditiona­l enemies increased recently with the blowing-up by unknown drones of material belonging to Iranian-backed armed factions inside Iraq. Iran responded by conducting operations in the same way against US interests and allies in the region. The CTS is one of the special combat units formed by the Americans in Iraq in 2007, with American training, equipment and partial funding. The CTS troops are an elite force in Iraq and have been commanded by Lt. Gen. Taleb Shaghati, who holds dual Iraqi and US citizenshi­p and is known to be one of America's men in Iraq.

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