Iraq ‘shrine factions’ look to peel away from Hashd

Iraq ‘shrine factions’ look to peel away from Hashd
Iraqis wave flags of Hashd Al-Shaabi, an Iraqi paramilitary network dominated by Iran-backed factions, during a demonstration in the holy shrine city of Najaf. (AFP)
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Updated 13 December 2020
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Iraq ‘shrine factions’ look to peel away from Hashd

Iraq ‘shrine factions’ look to peel away from Hashd
  • Hamdi Malik, a London-based expert on Shiite factions, said the shrine groups were now publicly insisting on a separation

NAJAF: Around the corner from Iraq’s holiest shrines, a years-long struggle over allegiances and resources is coming to a head — threatening a dangerous schism within a powerful state-sponsored security force.
The growing fissure pits the vast Iran-aligned wing of the Hashd Al-Shaabi network against four factions linked to the shrines of Iraq’s twin holy cities, Karbala and Najaf.
Those factions, dubbed “the Shrine Hashd” and comprising around 20,000 active fighters, held their first strategic planning meeting earlier this month.
Throughout the packed three days, spokesmen for the shrine groups leaned on two sources of legitimacy: A patriotic, “Iraq-only” discourse, and the blessing of the “marjaiyah,” Iraq’s Shiite spiritual leadership.
“The Shrine Hashd are the origin of the broader Hashd,” Hazem Sakhr, a spokesman for the four factions, told AFP.
“We are committed to Iraqi law and the marjaiyah’s orders.”
Maytham Al-Zaidi, the prominent commander of the largest shrine group known as the Abbas Combat Division, struck a nationalistic, reformist tone.
“The main reasons for establishing the Shrine Hashd is to serve our country, and to correct both its track record and trajectory,” he said.
Ali Al-Hamdani, who heads the 3,000-member Ali Al-Akbar Brigade, said the meeting — held in Najaf and Karbala — was “exclusively” for the Shrine Hashd, setting their future apart from the rest.
Hamdi Malik, a London-based expert on Shiite factions, said the shrine groups were now publicly insisting on a separation.
“They are escalating with this new conference, and want to accelerate that process,” Malik told AFP.
The Hashd Al-Shaabi network was formed in 2014 when Iraq’s top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, issued an edict urging citizens to fight the advancing Sunni extremists of Daesh.
His call brought together already-existing paramilitary factions and new formations, including the Shrine Hashd.
But internal disputes emerged as early as 2016, with Malik pointing to three main fault lines.

SPEEDREAD

The growing fissure pits the vast Iran-aligned wing of the Hashd Al-Shaabi network against four factions linked to the shrines of Iraq’s twin holy cities, Karbala and Najaf.

Shrine factions began complaining that they were being starved of resources by Abu Mahdi Al-Muhandis, the umbrella group’s deputy head.
Muhandis died in a US strike in January this year that also killed his friend, top Iranian general, Qasem Soleimani.
The Shrine Hashd had accused Muhandis of prioritizing factions closer to Tehran in the distribution of military equipment and state-allocated salaries.
Malik said the tug-of-war was linked to a second, more profound split: a “real ideological divide” over ties to neighboring Iran, which had long provided support to armed groups in Iraq.
Those factions are even dubbed “the loyalist Hashd” for their perceived allegiance to Tehran over Baghdad.
At the meeting, spokesmen were careful not to specifically criticize Iran but repeatedly rejected what they characterised as external meddling.
“Foreign intervention is dangerous. The Shrine Hashd rejects all shapes and sizes it may come in,” Sakhr said.
The 90-year-old Sistani, known to be wary of Iran’s influence, has not commented publicly on the meeting — but it would not have gone ahead without his tacit approval, said Malik.
“It’s important for Sistani, while he is alive and capable, that he puts his house in order,” said Sajad Jiyad, a fellow at US think tank The Century Foundation.
Thirdly, shrine-linked groups have looked disdainfully at the Hashd’s dabbling in politics.
“Sistani had given clear instructions that no Hashd member should participate in politics. But pro-Iran factions in the Hashd created the Fatah alliance and took part in the 2018 parliamentary elections,” Malik said.
Fatah won the second-largest number of seats and wields significant influence in both parliament and several government ministries.
With new elections set to be held in June 2021, shrine factions have said they will stick to Sistani’s orders.
“Our members are free to participate as voters but not as candidates,” said Mushtaq Abbas Maan, the media head for Karbala’s Abbas shrine, which sponsors the factions.
While The Century Foundation’s Jiyad said he doubted armed conflict would erupt between the two wings, he said a divorce would likely be messy.
The Shrine f still lack a legal or administrative framework to govern their forces outside the broader network’s by-laws, and government decrees linking them to the prime minister’s office have been slow to take hold.
At the conference, Maan appealed to the premier, who is Iraq’s commander-in-chief, to “urgently” bring shrine factions under his wing, thereby finalizing their split from the wider network.
But shrine factions also fear that if they peel away, “loyalist” groups could monopolize the Hashd’s budget, fighting force and political influence, Malik said.
Their moves have already irked the Iran-linked Hashd, whose commanders declined AFP’s requests for comment.
But the sharp-tongued Qais Al-Khazali, who heads a powerful Hashd faction known as Asaib Ahl Al-Haq, told state media last month that a secession by shrine groups could prompt other wings to strike out on their own, too.
“The Hashd will be divided into three. That means the end of the Hashd,” he warned.