Iraqi Defense Minister Statements on Armed Factions Spark Controversy
Controversial statements and caveats put out by the Iraqi Defense Minister Juma Inad last Saturday spiked nationwide concerns over paramilitaries clashing with state institutions over social and political differences.
The minister’s comments followed tensions that
erupted post the arrest of Qassem Musleh, a prominent leader in the Popular
Mobilization Forces (PMF), an Iraqi state-sponsored umbrella organization
composed of around 40 armed factions.
Inad warned of repeating history in the sense
that PMF factions resorting to anti-state violence to carry out their agenda.
“How can 40
unarmored wheels carrying groups of individuals stand before an army that has
the capabilities to fight a state,” said the minister, labeling recent PMF
actions as a “security breach.”
Last Wednesday, Baghdad shut down its Green
Zone, a heavily fortified zone in the center of the Iraqi capital.
At the time, PMF shooters were deployed across
all of the zone’s gates, escalating fears of an armed conflict erupting as
national counterterrorism forces and parts of the Iraqi army surrounding its vicinity.
“Whoever
believes that counterterrorism operations against ISIS would not have been
completed without the PMF is wrong,” said Inad, emphasizing that the army’s
role in freeing Iraq from terrorism is sufficient.
However, he recognized the PMF’s part in
accelerating the defeat of ISIS with the help of the Levantine country’s air
force.
Fatah Alliance, which gave the PMF political
coverage from 2014 to 2017, slammed Inad’s comments as provocative.
“Parliament
must hold any military commander who incites infighting among armed forces
accountable,” said the coalition’s lawmaker Muhammad Abdul Karim.
“The
defense minister’s statement is a clear fueling of fighting between the PMF and
the army,” he added.
He stressed that national armed forces clashing with the PMF would only advance the interests of foreign occupation.