Maesh: Suspicious mix of ISIS and Iranian Revolutionary Guard
After years of claiming false heroism, Iranian Revolutionary
Guard Corps (IRGC) commander Major General Hossein Salami admitted in a speech
to his country's parliament that the emergence of ISIS offered an opportunity
to increase Tehran's influence in the region.
Salami, who is listed on the terrorist list, added that
Tehran defeated the Americans, whom he accused of supporting ISIS, without
mentioning his militia’s involvement in supporting the terrorist organization
in Syria and Iraq, especially after the killing of former Quds Force commander
Qassem Soleimani.
According to media reports, Iraq’s Kata’ib Hezbollah, Asa’ib
Ahl al-Haq, Sayed al-Shuhada Brigades and Imam Ali Brigades transferred many
Arab and foreign ISIS militants and prominent leaders who were detained by
Iranian militias in Syria and then recently released. They were transferred
from Syria to Iraq in coordination with the Lebanese Hezbollah militia and
under the direct supervision of the Iranian Quds Force, with the aim of
creating an atmosphere of chaos as a pretext for the Iranian-backed Popular
Mobilization Forces (PMF) operating on Iraqi soil, as well as to intensify
pressure on US forces.
ISIS’s advancement in northern and central Iraq in 2014
turned into a card in Iran's hand, as regional and western countries were
hesitant to intervene and discuss plans to confront the new upheaval in the
balance of power on the ground, meaning the Iranians were the first to reach
the battlefield.
In light of Iran’s influence, the Iraqi army turned into a
predominantly Shiite militia, which made its leaders withdraw from their
responsibilities in defending the Iraqi province of Nineveh due to it being a mainly
Sunni province.
Instead of Tehran being accused as a result of its influence
in Baghdad at the time of Nuri al-Maliki’s government, it now wants to be seen
as Iraq’s savior from the evils of ISIS.
This is the claim echoed by former Iranian Parliament
Speaker Ali Larijani, who said that if Iran had not interfered in Iraq, the
situation in the country would have gotten completely out of control.
Earlier this year, the hashtag “ISIS and the militias were
made Iran” spread on Twitter, considering that both ISIS and the militias are
products of Iran aiming to impose their control over the countries of the
region.
Activists and bloggers published several photos, including
one that included Iraqi militia leaders, and called them “Maesh” as a mix
between the words “militias” and the Arabic term “Daesh” for ISIS. Others also
posted a video clip of previous statements by former Iraqi Deputy Prime
Minister Baha Araji in which he openly spoke about Iran's support and the establishment
of ISIS in the region.
It has become known that ISIS serves Iran completely, as its
terrorist elements pay great attention to killing officers and generals of the
Iraqi army and weakening it in favor of the militias, which makes Iraq confused.
This is exactly what Iran wants, in order to keep Iraq under its sovereignty,
while ISIS deepens the security chaos, providing flimsy justifications for the
survival of Iraq’s terrorist PMF and eliminating the specter of its dissolution
or dismantling.



