The Jerusalem Post

Iraqi Shi’ite threat flagged by mystery explosion

Who are the Iranian-backed militias in Iraq who threaten Israel, the US, and the entire region?

- • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN

An explosion at a site used by Iranian-backed Shi’ite militias in Iraq has focused a spotlight on the role that these groups play in Iraq and their threat to the region.

The site of the explosion, around 50 km. north of Baghdad overnight Friday, includes a hangar and several concrete walls, and is part of a compound used by the Iraqi-based Popular Mobilizati­on Units, a group of militias that are generally linked to Iran. These groups are mostly made up of Shi’ites, but some include other Iraqi religious and ethnic groups.

Militiamen investigat­ed a large crater after the explosion. The Iraqi authoritie­s appeared to indicate that they did not detect any planes or drones in the area prior to it. Iraq is therefore downplayin­g the mysterious explosion.

The Iranians also downplayed reports of an Israeli airstrike on Friday. Iran wants to downplay any incidents that appear to be a setback for the Islamic Republic or its proxies and allies. Neverthele­ss, experts who follow Iraq and open source intelligen­ce analysts have concluded that the explosion seems to have taken place where a container was located that may have housed munitions.

The question is, who are these Iraqi-based Iranian proxies and allies? The militias in Iraq have deep roots tied to Iran. For instance the Badr Organizati­on, which is linked to the militias, has its origins in the 1980s when it was working alongside the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps in opposition to Saddam Hussein’s regime. Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, a leader of Kataib Hezbollah in Iraq, who was killed in 2020 by a US drone strike, also earned his spurs in the 1980s working with the Iranians. These groups are tied to Hezbollah and other Iranian-backed groups in the region.

The Iranian-backed militias in Iraq expanded after the US invasion in 2003. They benefited from the fall of Saddam Hussein and within a few years they grew exponentia­lly and began to take on more official roles in Iraq because the militias were tied to political parties.

In 2014 when ISIS invaded Iraq, the militias got another boost when Shia cleric Muqtada

al-Sadr issued a fatwa calling on young men to fight ISIS. The volunteers were funneled into units by the militias, expanding their force to more than 100,000 men. When the war on ISIS was over, the militias were able to get official funding as a paramilita­ry organizati­on. This cemented their official role.

As such, the militias were able to stockpile more weapons and control military compounds in an official capacity. For instance, the site called “Kalsu” north of Baghdad where the explosion took place was formerly used by the US as a military base, and then handed over to the Iraqis, who let the militias use it.

WHEN ISIS was largely defeated in Iraq in 2017, the militias set their sights on controllin­g the Iraq-Syria border. On the Syrian side at Albukamal the Iraqi militia Kataib Hezbollah set up its headquarte­rs. Later, the Iranians swooped in and built a base near Albukamal.

In 2018, reports said that the militias were moving ballistic missiles to Anbar in western Iraq. Tensions rose that year and the next as the militias increased their anti-Israel rhetoric.

The leader of the Asaib Ahl al-Haq militia, Qais Khazali, threatened Israel from Lebanon. The militias put out statements

saying that they would join in any future war between Israel and Hezbollah or Iran. This came as Tehran said it was weaving a number of “arenas” against Israel, a reference to creating a multi-front war against the Jewish state using forces in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen.

The next step for Iran was to

mobilize the militias to attack US forces in 2019. The militias also ratcheted up the rhetoric against Israel, accusing it of targeting Iraq in 2018 and 2019.

The militias often fired 107mm. rockets at US forces in Iraq, which led to the US assassinat­ion of IRGC Quds Force head Qasem Soleimani and militia leader Abu Mahdi

al Muhandis in January 2020. The Iranians responded with ballistic missiles on the US facility at Asad base in Iraq. Militia attacks grew and the US moved most forces to the autonomous Kurdistan region.

In 2021, the militias in Iraq, likely acting on Iranian orders, launched attacks on the Kurdistan autonomous region. They targeted a hangar at Erbil Internatio­nal Airport used by the CIA, according to The Washington Post. The militias also launched a drone targeting Israel during the Israel-Hamas conflict in May 2021.

After Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, the Iraqi militias have targeted Israel with drones – in Eilat, for instance – increasing regional tension.

The mysterious explosion in Iraq comes amid Israel-Iran tensions as the Iraqi-based pro-Iran militias become an increasing threat to US forces in Iraq and also to Israel.

Since October 7 they have perpetrate­d around 200 attacks on US forces in Iraq and Syria. They killed three US service members in Jordan in a drone attack on January 27.

Their use of drones is part of Iran’s drone proliferat­ion across the region.

The militias in Iraq are therefore a multi-layered threat. They use Iranian technology, stockpile and move weapons to Syria and Hezbollah, and threaten other US partners in the region, such as the autonomous Kurdistan region.

While the term “militias” best encapsulat­es these groups, they operate under various, changing names. For instance, when they target Israel they just call themselves the “Islamic Resistance.” The term “resistance” is used by other Iranian groups such as Hezbollah, who see themselves as part of an “axis of resistance.”

Another name is Kataib Hezbollah, one of the most powerful Iraqi groups. It kidnapped researcher Elizabeth Tsurkov last year in Iraq. While their names matter, their capabiliti­es and their creeping control of Iraq as a base for Iranian threats matter even more.

 ?? (Alaa al-Marjani/Reuters) ?? A VIEW OF the Kalso military base after it was hit by a huge explosion last week in Iraq’s Babil Province.
(Alaa al-Marjani/Reuters) A VIEW OF the Kalso military base after it was hit by a huge explosion last week in Iraq’s Babil Province.

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